Abstract

In industrial production, current pipe-climbing robots can replace humans in real-time monitoring, leak inspection, and other tasks. However, most pipe-climbing robots are designed for specific applications with complex structures; this limits the adaptability to various conditions. To solve this issue, this letter presents a one-piece 3D-printed pipe-climbing robot composed of sequenced novel soft bending mechanisms. The mechanisms use the small strains of soft materials to achieve large bending deformation. The proposed robot is highly adaptable to pipes with various diameters, radii of curvature, inclinations, and even outer/inner walls because of modular grippers and an inchworm inspired middle section. The good strength and flexibility of the robot are simultaneously achieved by reasonable structural design using one material. In this letter, the design concept and processing methods are introduced. The finite element method is adopted to predict the maximum bending angle of modules to aid design, and a torque test bench is built to acquire output torque and restoring torque. Then, the model of the entire robot is built to facilitate specialized design. Finally, several experiments are conducted to verify the good adaptability of the robot to pipes of various diameters (18-36 mm), inclinations (0-90°, even horizontal pipes), and radii of curvature (minimum to 19 mm). The static bearing ability of the robot reaches 1000g (without climbing at 7 bar, 22 mm diameter vertical pipes), which is almost 80 times its weight. In addition, the load-bearing ability of the robot while climbing on pipes in various states is obtained.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call