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Stanford University

Stanford Seminar - Micro but Mighty- Microbots in a Macro World

Stanford University via YouTube

Overview

Humans have long been inspired by the incredible abilities of ants. They can go anywhere, build vast underground networks, and carry objects more than 100 times their weight. Indeed, despite their diminutive size, ants seem to be able to affect the human world quite a lot. We may be tempted to attribute this amazing capability primarily to the muscular strength of insects, which is certainly impressive, however as Archimedes adeptly pointed out over 2000 years ago, the ground reaction forces are equally important:

"Give me a place to stand and with a lever I will move the whole world'' -- Archimedes. While humans rely on gravity and friction, both of these quantities become problematic as mass reduces with volume. At small scales, insects instead exploit interaction mechanisms like adhesion that, unlike coulomb friction, scale with area and do not depend on the magnitude of a normal force. However, adhesion without a method of release is not useful; an insect or robot would become stuck and could not move. In addition, at smaller scales, legged locomotion requires higher step rates than at larger scales to maintain the same absolute velocity. Therefore, the "controllable" adhesives that ants use must engage and disengage more quickly at small scales.

The goal of this work is to build microrobots that are inspired by ants to apply forces that are large enough to appreciably affect the human scale world. We want to build microrobots that can not only explore a disaster site in a search and rescue mission, but pull the survivors to safety when they are found. We have developed the first step toward that goal: a family of "µTug" robots that use a controllable adhesive, just like ants, to move objects up to 2000 times their size, while still being able to run at 30Hz. In order to build such robots, we examine 4 core properties of the adhesives and the actuators required to use them. We also explore the interactions of microrobots working as teams to move loads well beyond the capability of a single robot. Unlike many microrobots, the µTugs are shown to achieve near perfect sharing of load so force capabilities for a team are simply linear with number of robots. Thus a team of 6 microrobots, with a total mass of 100g, was capable of exerting enough force to move the author's 1800kg automobile.

Syllabus

Introduction.
Use within the Body Viruses / Bacteria / Cells.
Strong Ground Motion & Team Behaviors Ants.
Outline.
Physical Assumptions • In the long run, the average force produced by the robot is limited to its propulsive capabilities.
Example.
Load fraction of Stride.
Advantage.
Microrobots, macro structures.
Friction: Best for Being Big.
Adhesion: Better for Being Small.
Microrobots Need to Run!.
Ant climbing closeup.
Ant Leg: Controllable Adhesion.
Dynamic Performance • All features engage and disengage in parallel, speeding up the processes.
Demo: Adhesive Tile.
Demo: Laptop Tilt.
Demo: Gecko Tape Trick.
Minimum Force Grasping.
3 parts of a tugboat.
Force displacement curve for adhesives.
Actuator Choices.
Force-Displacement curves Adhesives and Actuators.
Piezoelectric bimorph u Tug.
Constant Force Actuators (Shape Memory Alloy).
Continuous Rotation Actuators *Hard to scale manufacturing.

Taught by

Stanford Online

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