Abstract

Locomotive robots based on tensegrities have recently drawn much attention from various communities. A common strategy to realize long-distance locomotion is combining several basic gaits that are designed in advance. Considering the unavoidable uncertainties of the environment and the real locomotive system, selecting the gaits with high robustness is essential to the implementation of long-distance locomotion of tensegrity robots. However, no quantitative approach for robustness evaluation of rolling gaits is reported in recent research work. In this study, a practical and quantitative method is proposed for the robustness evaluation of rolling gaits of tensegrity robots. A mathematical model is built to describe the evaluation process, and the success rate of rolling is adopted as an indicator of robustness. Sensitivity analysis and robust evaluation are conducted on the rolling gaits of a typical six-strut tensegrity robot. Specifically, the sensitivities of the rolling gaits to five uncertain parameters (i.e. tendon stiffness, initial tendon prestress, the equivalent mass of nodes, actuation lengths of actuators, and slope of ground) are investigated and discussed in detail, and the robustness of the rolling gaits is evaluated by correlated random sampling. Experiments on a physical prototype of the six-strut tensegrity robot are carried out to verify the proposed concept and method.

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