Abstract

AbstractHeavy‐duty hexapod robots have impressive stability, high load‐bearing capacity, and exceptional adaptability to rugged terrains. They are capable of working in challenging outdoor environments such as planetary exploration, disaster relief and mountain transportation. Their ability to traverse terrain requires effective motion planning and accurate force distribution, neither of which is currently at the level required for widespread practical applications. In this paper, the mechanical legs are divided into support and swing legs, and the adaptability of the hexapod robot to unknown rugged terrain is enhanced by introducing the Decomposition Quadratic Programming‐based Contact Force Distribution (DQP‐based CFD) method. Moreover, an efficient replanning strategy can handle accidental collisions between swinging legs and unmodelled obstacles. Extensive field experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our proposed motion planning and contact force distribution methods.

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