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Smooth Vertical Surface Climbing With Directional Adhesion

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TLDR
The design and fabrication methods used to create underactuated, multimaterial structures that conform to surfaces over a range of length scales from centimeters to micrometers are described.
Abstract
Stickybot is a bioinspired robot that climbs smooth vertical surfaces such as glass, plastic, and ceramic tile at 4 cm/s. The robot employs several design principles adapted from the gecko including a hierarchy of compliant structures, directional adhesion, and control of tangential contact forces to achieve control of adhesion. We describe the design and fabrication methods used to create underactuated, multimaterial structures that conform to surfaces over a range of length scales from centimeters to micrometers. At the finest scale, the undersides of Stickybot's toes are covered with arrays of small, angled polymer stalks. Like the directional adhesive structures used by geckos, they readily adhere when pulled tangentially from the tips of the toes toward the ankles; when pulled in the opposite direction, they release. Working in combination with the compliant structures and directional adhesion is a force control strategy that balances forces among the feet and promotes smooth attachment and detachment of the toes.

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Patent

Sticky boom non-cooperative capture device

TL;DR: In this article, a non-cooperative capture device with a fixed end coupled to a structure and a free end was presented. But the capture head was not close enough to the object to capture the object.
Journal Article

Inspection of pole-like structures using a vision-controlled VTOL UAV and shared autonomy

TL;DR: In this paper, an approach for the inspection of vertical pole-like infrastructure using a vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) unmanned aerial vehicle and shared autonomy is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

A shape memory alloy-actuated gecko-inspired robotic gripper

TL;DR: In this paper, a shape memory alloy-based gripper for grasping flat objects with gecko-inspired adhesives is presented, which is less expensive, lighter, simpler, and smaller, while still maintaining the ability to control the adhesive pressure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climbing with adhesion: from bioinspiration to biounderstanding

TL;DR: Taking gecko-inspired climbing as an example, it is shown that the process of extracting principles from animals and adapting them to robots provides insights for both robotics and biology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enhanced Locomotion Efficiency of a Bio-inspired Walking Robot using Contact Surfaces with Frictional Anisotropy

TL;DR: A novel approach is proposed that exploits the interaction between a passive anisotropic scale-like material and a non-smooth substrate to enhance locomotion efficiency of a robot walking on inclines to open up a new way of achieving energy-efficient legged robot locomotion.
References
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Book

Intermolecular and surface forces

TL;DR: The forces between atoms and molecules are discussed in detail in this article, including the van der Waals forces between surfaces, and the forces between particles and surfaces, as well as their interactions with other forces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Surface energy and the contact of elastic solids

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of surface energy on the contact between elastic solids is discussed and an analytical model for its effect upon the contact size and the force of adhesion between two lightly loaded spherical solid surfaces is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for van der Waals adhesion in gecko setae

TL;DR: This work provides the first direct experimental evidence for dry adhesion of gecko setae by van der Waals forces, and suggests a possible design principle underlying the repeated, convergent evolution of dry adhesive microstructures in gecko, anoles, skinks, and insects.
Journal ArticleDOI

From micro to nano contacts in biological attachment devices.

TL;DR: An extensive microscopic study has shown a strong inverse scaling effect in these attachment devices, whereas μm dimensions of the terminal elements of the setae are sufficient for flies and beetles, geckos must resort to sub-μm devices to ensure adhesion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of Multifingered Hands

TL;DR: This paper discusses three fundamental problems relating to grasping and manipulating objects within an articulated, multifingered hand: determining how hard to squeeze an ob ject in order to ensure a secure grasp, determining the finger- joint motions required to produce a desired motion of the object, and determining the workspace of the hand.
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