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State Derivation of a 12-axis Gyroscope-free Inertial Measurement Unit |
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The derivation of linear acceleration, angular acceleration, and angular
velocity states from a 12-axis gyroscope-free inertial measurement unit
that utilizes four 3-axis accelerometer measurements at four distinct
locations is reported. Particularly, a new algorithm which derives the
angular velocity from its quadratic form and derivative form based on
the context-based interacting multiple model is demonstrated. The
performance of the system was evaluated under arbitrary 3-dimensional
motion.
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J. C. Lu and P. C. Lin, “State Derivation of a
12-axis Gyroscope-free Inertial Measurement Unit”, Sensors, Mar. 2011,
vol.11, no.3, pp3145-3162 |
Design of a Leg-Wheel Hybrid Mobile Platform |
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We
report on the design of a leg-wheel hybrid platform Quattroped.
Comparing to most hybrid platforms which have separate mechanisms of
wheels and legs, this robot is implemented with a transformation
mechanism which directly changes the morphology of wheels (i.e. a full
circle) into 2 degree-of-freedom legs (i.e. combining two half-circles
as a leg). The mechatronics, software infrastructure, and the initial
experimental test of the robot are also reported. |
S. Y Shen, C. H. Li, C. C. Cheng, J. C. Lu, S. F.
Wang, and P. C. Lin, “Design of a Leg-Wheel Hybrid Mobile Platform”,
in IEEE/RSJ Int. Conf. Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS), Oct. 2009 |
Design and Implementation of a Nine-Axis Inertial Measurement Unit |
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A nine-axis inertial measurement unit (IMU) that utilizes three-axis
angular velocity measurements from rate gyroscopes and six-axis linear
acceleration measurements from three two-axis accelerometers is
reported. This system can derive linear acceleration, angular
acceleration, and angular velocity via simple memoryless matrix
operations, and eliminates the requirement for accelerometer
installation at the center ofmass as in the traditional IMU. An optimal
configuration of the system is proposed based on the analysis of rigid
body dynamics and matrix theory. In this configuration, the computed
angular acceleration is free of the gravity effect as well. Analyses of
sensor position and orientation errors are reported. Experimental
validation was executed to evaluate the performance of the system. |
P. C. Lin, J. C. Lu, C. H. Tsai, and C. W. Ho, “Design
and Implementation of a Nine-Axis Inertial Measurement Unit”, IEEE/ASME
Transactions on Mechatronics (TMech) (in press) |
The Electromechanical Characteristics of ZnO Grown on Polyethylene
Terephthalate Substrates |
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We investigate the electromechanical properties of ZnO grown on
polyethylene terephthalate (PET) and compare the results with those
obtained from the counterparts on glass substrates. The elastic moduli
of ZnO on PET measured by a microstretcher are very close to those of
ZnO grown on glass substrates measured by nanoindentation: The moduli
decrease then increase as the O2/Ar ratio increases. Films start to peel
off from the plastic substrates when oxygen content reaches 50%. The in
situ measurement of the ZnO resistance under uniaxial tensile stretching
is influenced by the induced piezoelectric voltage, leading to a
reduction in the electrical resistance for highly resistive ZnO films.
The trend of the preferred orientation in relation to the oxygen content
of the sputtering atmosphere is the same for ZnO films grown on either
PET or glass substrates. The optical bandgap(Eg) of the ZnO films on
both substrates exhibits crystal orientation dependence, varying from
3.18 eV with(002) preferred orientation to 3.25 eV, with a large number
of (100) and (101) oriented crystals. |
J. Chen, H. Shieh, I. Cheng, C. Hsiao, P. C. Lin,
and Y. Yeh, “The Electromechanical Characteristics of ZnO Grown on
Polyethylene Terephthalate Substrates”, Journal of The Electrochemical
Society, May 2010, vol.157, no.7, H750-H754 |
Harnessing Surface Wrinkle Patterns in Soft Matter |
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Mechanical instabilities in soft materials, specifi cally wrinkling,
have led to the formation of unique surface patterns for a wide range of
applications that are related to surface topography and its dynamic
tuning. In this progress report, two distinct approaches for wrinkle
formation, including mechanical stretching/releasing of oxide/PDMS
bilayers and swelling of hydrogel fi lms confi ned on a rigid substrate
with a depth-wise modulus gradient, are discussed. The wrinkling
mechanisms and transitions between different wrinkle patterns are
studied. Strategies to control the wrinkle pattern order and
characteristic wavelength are suggested, and some efforts in harnessing
topographic tunability in elastomeric PDMS bilayer wrinkled fi lms for
various applications, including tunable adhesion, wetting, microfl
uidics, and microlens arrays, are highlighted. The report concludes with
perspectives on the future directions in manipulation of pattern
formation for complex structures, and potential new technological
applications. |
S. Yang, K. Khare, and P. C. Lin, “Harnessing
Surface Wrinkle Patterns in Soft Matter”, Advanced Functional Materials,
Aug. 2010, vol.20, no.16, pp2550-2564 |
Mechanically switchable wetting on wrinkled elastomers with dual-scale
roughness |
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We
report the fabrication of a new superhydrophobic surface with dual-scale
roughness by coating silica nanoparticles on a poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS)
elastomer bilayer film with micro-scaled ripples. The wetting behavior
of the surface can be reversibly tuned by applying a mechanical strain,
which induces the change in micro-scale roughness determined by the
ripples. The dual-scale roughness promotes the wetting transition of the
final dual-structure surface from Wenzel region into the Cassie region,
thus, reducing the sliding angle at least three times in comparison to
that from the surfaces with single-scale roughness (either from the
nanoparticle film or the wrinkled PDMS film). In addition, three-times
and fast-response tunability of the sliding angle by applying mechanical
strain on this dual-roughness surface is demonstrated. |
P. C. Lin, and S. Yang, “Mechanically
Switchable Wetting on the Wrinkled Elastomers with Dual-scale Roughness”,
Soft Matter, Feb. 2009, vol.5, 1011-1018 |
Mechanically tunable dry adhesive from wrinkled elastomers |
supplementary video |
We
report a new dry adhesive structure using a rippled
poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) elastomer bilayer film, whose surface
roughness and adhesion can be reversibly regulated by applying
mechanical strain. It has a set of advantages not offered by other
techniques for regulation of adhesion, including real-time tunability,
no requirement of specific surface chemistry, operability under ambient
conditions, and relative ease of control. To understand the mechanism
for adhesion regulation quantitatively, we have modeled the mechanics of
adhesion in the limits of small- and large-amplitude ripples, and show
good agreement with indentation experiments. We demonstrate the
real-time tunability of the new adhesive structure by repeatedly picking
and releasing a glass ball simply by modulating the mechanical stretch
of the rippled PDMS film. |
P. C. Lin, S. Vajpayee, A. Jagota, C. Hui, S.
Yang, “Mechanically Tunable Dry Adhesive from Wrinkled Elastomers”,
Soft Matter, Aug. 2008, vol.4, 1830-1835 |
One-Step Nanoscale Assembly of Complex Structures via Harnessing of an
Elastic Instability |
supplementary video |
We
report on a simple yet robust method to produce orientationally
modulated two-dimensional patterns with sub-100 nm features over cm2
regions via a solvent-induced swelling instability of an elastomeric
film with micrometer-scale perforations. The dramatic reduction of
feature size (∼10 times) is achieved in a single step, and the process
is reversible and repeatable without the requirement of delicate surface
preparation or chemistry. By suspending ferrous and other functional
nanoparticles in the solvent, we have faithfully printed the emergent
patterns onto flat and curved substrates. We model this elastic
instability in terms of elastically interacting “dislocation dipoles”
and find complete agreement between the theoretical ground-state and the
observed pattern. Our understanding allows us to manipulate the
structural details of the membrane to tailor the elastic distortions and
generate a variety of nanostructures. |
Y. Zhang, E. A. Matsumoto, A. Peter, P. C. Lin,
R. D. Kamien, and S. Yang, “One-step nanoscale assembly of complex
structures via harnessing of an elastic instability”, Nano Letters, 2008 ,
vol.8, no.4, 1192-1196 (pdf),
supplementary information |
Strain responsive concave and convex microlens arrays |
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We
report the fabrication of single-component, strain responsive microlens
arrays with real-time tunability. The concave lens array is fabricated
by patterning hard oxide layer on a bidirectionally prestretched soft
elastomer, polydimethylsiloxane PDMS followed by confined buckling upon
release of the prestrain. The convex microlens array is replica molded
from the concave lenses in PDMS. Due to difference in lens formation
mechanisms, the two types of lenses show different tunable range of
focal length in response to the applied strain: large focal length
change is observed from the concave microlens array, whereas that from
the convex microlens array is much smaller. |
D. Chandra, S. Yang, P. C. Lin, “Strain
Responsive Concave and Convex Microlens Arrays”, Applied Physics
Letters (APL), Dec. 2007, vol.91, 251912 |
Design of a Bio-inspired Dynamical Vertical Climbing Robot |
Supplementary videos:
Front view
Side view |
This
paper reviews a template for dynamical climbing originating in biology,
explores its hypothetical utility , and offers a preliminary look at
empirical data bearing on the feasibility of adapting it to build a
robot that “runs” vertically upward. The recently proposed pendulous
climbing model abstracts remarkable similarities in dynamic wall scaling
behavior exhibited by radically different animal species. The present
paper’s first contribution summarizes a continuing numerical study of
this model to hypothesize that these animals’ apparently “wasteful”
commitments to lateral oscillations may be justified by a significant
gain in the dynamical stability and, hence, the robustness of their
resulting climbing capability. We explore numerically a scaled version
of this template devised to inform the design of a physically realizable
robotic mechanism with the same climbing behavior. The paper’s second
contribution documents the design and offers very preliminary empirical
data arising from a physical instantiation of this model.
Notwithstanding the significant differences between the proposed
bio-inspired template and its physical robot model, these intial data
suggest the mechanical climber may be capable of roughly reproducing
both the motions and ground reaction forces characteristic of dynamical
climbing animals. Even without proper tuning the robot’s steady state
trajectories manifest a substantial exchange of kinetic and potential
energy, resulting in vertical speeds of 0.14 m/s (0.35 bl/s) and
claiming its place as the first bio-inspired dynamical legged climbing
platform.
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J. E. Clark, D. I. Goldman, P. C. Lin, G. Lynch, T. S.
Chen, H. Komsuoglu, R. J. Full, D. E. Koditschek, “Design of a
Bio-inspired Dynamical Vertical Climbing Robot”, in Robotics: Science and
Systems (RSS), Jun. 2007 |
Spontaneous formation of 1D ripples in transit to highly-ordered 2D
herringbone structures through sequential and unequal 2D mechanical
force |
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Spontaneous
formation of periodic structures with controlled morphologies on
surfaces has been of great interest for many potential applications. We
report the formation of various submicron wrinkle patterns using
mechanical force coupled with oxygen plasma treatment on PDMS. It allows
us to control the amount and timing of strain applied to the substrate
on both planar directions (either simultaneously or sequentially), which
appears to be critical to maneuver the pattern formation of 1D ripple,
2D herringbone, and patterns in between in real time. We observe clear
transitions from ripple, to ripple with bifurcation, to
ripple/herringbone mixed features, and to completely 2D herringbone
structure. More specifically, we demonstrate the well-controlled
formation of a highly-ordered zigzag-based herringbone structure, and
elucidate the mechanisms of pattern formation and transition at a large
strain level (up to 60%). |
P. C. Lin, S. Yang, "Spontaneous Formation of 1D
Ripples in Transit to Highly-ordered 2D Herringbone Structures through
Sequential and Unequal 2D Mechanical Force", Applied Physics
Letters (APL), Jun. 2007, vol.90, 241903 |
RHex-SLIP: A Model of the Robotic Hexapod RHex in the Sagittal Plane |
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The
spring-loaded inverted pendulum (SLIP) is a simple, passively-elastic
two-degree-of-freedom model for legged locomotion that describes the
saggital-plane center of mass (COM) dynamics of many animal species and
some legged robots. In previous work we have extended SLIP to model
three-dimensional COM motions and to incorporate multiple stance legs.
To better understand the agile hexapedal robot RHex, here we incorporate
key details of leg design and motor specifications into SLIP, allowing
us to match SLIP gaits with experimental data from RHex, and to
investigate their stability properties. We find that motor and leg
characteristics, and leg touchdown and liftoff protocols, can
significantly influence stability, and that non-periodic "chaotic" gaits
can occur.
(in collaboration with Dr.
J. Seipel and Prof. P. Holmes at Princeton University) |
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Distributed Mechanical Feedback in Arthropods and Robots Simplifies
Control of Rapid Running on Challenging Terrain |
some movies |
Terrestrial
arthropods negotiate demanding terrain more effectively than any
search-and-rescue robot. Slow, precise stepping using distributed neural
feedback is one strategy for dealing with challenging terrain.
Alternatively, arthropods could simplify control on demanding surfaces
by rapid running that uses kinetic energy to bridge gaps between
footholds. We demonstrate that this is achieved using distributed
mechanical feedback, resulting from passive contacts along legs
positioned by pre-programmed trajectories favorable to their attachment
mechanisms. We used wire-mesh experimental surfaces to determine how a
decrease in foothold probability affects speed and stability. Spiders
and insects attained high running speeds on simulated terrain with 90%
of the surface contact area removed. Cockroaches maintained high speeds
even with their tarsi ablated, by generating horizontally oriented leg
trajectories. Spiders with more vertically directed leg placement used
leg spines, which resulted in more effective distributed contact by
interlocking with asperities during leg extension, but collapsing during
flexion, preventing entanglement. Ghost crabs, which naturally lack leg
spines, showed increased mobility on wire mesh after the addition of
artificial, collapsible spines. A bioinspired robot, RHex, was
redesigned to maximize effective distributed leg contact, by changing
leg orientation and adding directional spines. These changes improved RHex’s agility on challenging surfaces without adding sensors or
changing the control system. |
J. C. Spagna, D. I. Goldman, P. C. Lin, D. E.
Koditschek and Robert J. Full, "Distributed mechanical feedback in
arthropods and robots simplifies control of rapid running on challenging
terrain", Bioinspiration and Biomimetics, Mar. 2007, vol.2,
no.1, pp9-18, (Journal cover) |
Sensor
Data Fusion for Body State Estimation in a Hexapod Robot with Dynamical
Gaits |
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We
report on a hybrid 12 dimensional full body state estimator for a
hexapod robot executing a jogging gait in steady state on level terrain
with regularly alternating ground contact and aerial phases of motion.
We use a repeating sequence of continuous time dynamical models that are
switched in and out of an Extended Kalman Filter to fuse measurements
from a novel leg pose sensor and inertial sensors. We implement this
estimation procedure offline, using data extracted from numerous
repeated runs of the hexapod robot RHex (bearing the appropriate sensor
suite) and evaluate its performance with reference to a visual ground
truth measurement system, comparing as well, the relative performance of
different fusion approaches implemented via different model sequences. |
P. C. Lin, H. Komsuoglu, D. E. Koditschek, “Sensor
Data Fusion for Body State Estimation in a Hexapod Robot with Dynamical
Gaits”, IEEE Transactions on Robotics (TRO), Oct. 2006, vol.22, no.5,
pp932-943 |
A
Context-Based State Estimation Technique for Hybrid Systems |
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This
paper proposes an approach to robust state estimation for mobile robots
with intermittent dynamics. The approach consists of identifying the
robot’s mode of operation by classifying the output of onboard sensors
into mode-specific contexts. The underlying technique seeks to
efficiently use available sensor information to enable accurate,
high-bandwidth mode identification. Context classification is combined
with multiple-model filtering in order to significantly improve the
accuracy of state estimates for hybrid systems. This approach is
validated in simulation and shown experimentally to produce accurate
estimates on a jogging robot using low-cost sensors.
|
S. Skaff, A. Rizzi, H. Choset, P. C. Lin, “A
Context-Based State Estimation Technique for Hybrid Systems”, in Proc.
IEEE Int. Conf. Robotics and Automation (ICRA), Apr. 2005, Barcelona,
Spain, pp3935-3940 |
A
Leg Configuration Measurement System for Full-Body Pose Estimates in a
Hexapod Robot |
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We
report on a continuous-time rigid-body pose estimator for a walking
hexapod robot. Assuming at least three legs remain in ground contact at
all times, our algorithm uses the outputs of six leg-configuration
sensor models together with a priori knowledge of the ground and robot
kinematics to compute instantaneous estimates of the
6-degrees-of-freedom (6-DOF) body pose. We implement this estimation
procedure on the robot RHex by means of a novel sensory system
incorporating a model relating compliant leg member strain to leg
configuration delivered to the onboard CPU over a customized cheap
high-performance local wireless network. We evaluate the performance of
this algorithm at widely varying body speeds and over dramatically
different ground conditions by means of a 6-DOF vision-based
ground-truth measurement system (GTMS). We also compare the odometry
performance to that of sensorless schemes—both legged as well as on a
wheeled version of the robot—using GTMS measurements of elapsed
distance. |
P. C. Lin, H. Komsuoglu, D. E.
Koditschek, “A Leg Configuration Measurement System for Full Body Pose
Estimates in a Hexapod Robot”, IEEE Transactions on Robotics (TRO),
Jun. 2005, vol.21, no.3, pp411-422 |
Magnetic Torque
Compensating Methods for Cam Indexing Devices |
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In
automatic production processes, cam indexing devices are frequently
utilized to transportworkpieces intermittently to the appointed
manufacturing positions. However, because of alternating working forces
and rotational inertia, indexing devices tend to generate vibration
during each positioning process, which retards working speed and
degrades positioning accuracy. To minimize positioning vibration, we
developed a magnetic compensation concept and diverse devices based on
the concept. A magnetic torque compensator basically consists of a
magnetic loop with field generator and soft-magnetic elements. The
soft-magnetic elements are designed to generate relative motion to each
other to realize variable distribution of magnetic field and induce a
compensation torque to suppress the positioning vibration. In addition
to our experimental research, we investigated analytically the
influential parameters of the compensating torque and their
relationships by using the equivalent magnetic circuit method and the
finite-element method. We found that modifications of magnetic
arrangement or geometric parameters of functional elements lead to
different characteristics of the magnetic torque curve. On the basis of
the verified function and parameters of the magnetic torque compensator,
we built some configurations to synthesize the compensating torque
needed for countering vibration.
|
K. Huang, P. C. Lin, S.
Tsai, “Magnetic Torque Compensating Methods for Cam Indexing Devices”,
IEEE Transactions on Magnetics (TMAG), Mar. 2007, vol.43, no.3,
pp1061-1071 |
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