Bipedal isotropic lattice locomoting explorer: robotic platform for locomotion and manipulation of discrete lattice structures and lightweight space structures

US10046820B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10046820-B2
Application numberUS-201715633155-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateJun 26, 2017
Priority dateJun 27, 2016
Publication dateAug 14, 2018
Grant dateAug 14, 2018

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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Abstract

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A robotic platform for traversing and manipulating a modular 3D lattice structure is described. The robot is designed specifically for its tasks within a structured environment, and is simplified in terms of its numbers of degrees of freedom (DOF). This allows for simpler controls and a reduction of mass and cost. Designing the robot relative to the environment in which it operates results in a specific type of robot called a “relative robot”. Depending on the task and environment, there can be a number of relative robots. This invention describes a bipedal robot which can locomote across a periodic lattice structure made of building block parts. The robot is able to handle, manipulate, and transport these blocks when there is more than one robot. Based on a general inchworm design, the robot has added functionality while retaining minimal complexity, and can perform numerous maneuvers for increased speed, reach, and placement.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

What is claimed is: 1. A robot capable of traversing a three-dimensional lattice structure, comprising: two feet, each foot being a hollow polyhedron designed to fit around a boundary geometry of a volumetric pixel structure; two lower legs, each joined to one of the two feet at an ankle joint, and to an upper leg at a knee joint, the two upper legs coming together at a hip interface; and a plurality of motors to actuate the robot. 2. The robot of claim 1 , wherein the polyhedron is a tetrahedron. 3. The robot of claim 1 , further comprising a motor at each foot, at each of lower leg, at each knee joint, and at the hip interface. 4. The robot of claim 1 , wherein each foot comprises a latch mechanism driven by a servo motor to lock the foot onto the volumetric pixel structure. 5. The robot of claim 4 , wherein the latch passes through a hole near the top of the polyhedron, and is configured to pass under the top of the volumetric pixel structure and out the other side of the volumetric pixel structure, preventing the foot from lifting. 6. The robot of claim 1 , wherein each of the feet is attached to a lower leg by a radial bearing, each of the feet being press fit to an inside race of the radial bearing, the attached lower leg being press fit around the outside onto the outer race of the bearing. 7. The robot of claim 1 , further comprising a microcontroller to issue commands to actuate the robot. 8. The robot of claim 1 , wherein each of the motors is powered by a battery. 9. The robot of claim 1 , further comprising a pair of spur gears for each foot and lower leg connection to actuate rotation of the foot, one gear being built into the lower leg, the other gear being mounted to a servo motor. 10. The robot of claim 1 , wherein a top of each lower leg comprises a bracket and a shaft which is press-fit into the inside of a bearing, the outside of the bearing being press-fit into an end of an upper leg. 11. The robot of claim 1 , wherein a servo motor is mounted on each of the upper legs, so that an output spline radial axis of the servo motor is aligned with a bearing interface of a lower leg to which the upper leg is connected, a shaft of the lower leg extending through the bearing and attaching to the servo spline. 12. The robot of claim 11 , wherein the servo controls a rotational degree of freedom between the upper and lower leg. 13. The robot of claim 1 , wherein the hip interface comprises: a first upper leg having a shaft which press-fits into the inside of a bearing, a servo motor attached to the shaft; and a second upper leg press-fit around the outside of the bearing. 14. The robot of claim 13 , wherein the servo motor is rigidly attached to the shaft of the second upper leg. 15. The robot of claim 1 , wherein maneuvers the robot is capable of performing on the lattice structure comprise one or more of: climbing, or walking up or down vertically on the lattice perpendicular to the ground; inverted locomotion, or walking on the underside of surfaces parallel to the ground; rotating 90 degrees to move from X to Y translation; turning inside or outside corners to transition from one surface to a perpendicular surface; gripping with one foot and using the other foot to grip a single voxel; part placement, or extending to place a gripped voxel in a different area of the lattice; and coordinated part transportation, or attaching a gripped voxel to different area of the lattice. 16. The robot of claim 1 , wherein maneuvers the robot is capable of performing on the lattice structure comprise one or more of: traversing linearly (X); turning and traversing in the direction orthogonal to first direction (Y); turning up concave corners and down convex corners; traversing in direction normal to plan described by first two directions (Z); and stepping up/down a level (+/−Z). 17. The robot of claim 1 , wherein the foot terminates in a cylindrical feature with an outside diameter designed to press fit into an ankle bearing. 18. The robot of claim 1 , wherein the foot has mating features which align with four nodes of a volumetric pixel, to provide rotational and translational constraint. 19. The robot of claim 1 , wherein each of the ankle joints comprises: a knee joint actuator; a servo horn hirth joint coupling; a knee joint radial bearing; an upper leg link; a lower leg link with integral gear; an ankle joint radial bearing; an ankle joint mechanism and actuator; a latch mechanism and actuator; a latch mechanism slot; and a foot end effector. 20. A method of traversing an exterior of a three-dimensional lattice structure by a robot that comprises two feet, comprising: attaching a back foot to a voxel; reaching out with the front foot; attaching the front foot to a different voxel; detaching the back foot; and stepping forward with the back foot. 21. The method of claim 20 , further comprising after attaching the front foot, the step of rotating 180 degrees about the front foot, extending the back foot and attaching.

Assignees

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Classifications

  • damping of oscillations, e.g. nutation dampers · CPC title

  • Robotic manipulator systems for use in space · CPC title

  • using radiation, e.g. deployable solar arrays · CPC title

  • Spacecraft control systems · CPC title

  • Tools specially adapted for use in space · CPC title

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What does patent US10046820B2 cover?
A robotic platform for traversing and manipulating a modular 3D lattice structure is described. The robot is designed specifically for its tasks within a structured environment, and is simplified in terms of its numbers of degrees of freedom (DOF). This allows for simpler controls and a reduction of mass and cost. Designing the robot relative to the environment in which it operates results in a…
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Massachusetts Inst Technology, Nasa, Massachusetts Institute For Tech
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification B25J9/0009. Mapped technology areas include Operations & Transport.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Aug 14 2018 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 1 related publication on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).