Demonstration and Analysis of Quadrupedal Passive Dynamic Walking
Citations Over TimeTop 17% of 2009 papers
Abstract
Animals, including human beings, can travel in a variety of environments adaptively. Legged locomotion makes this possible. However, legged locomotion is temporarily unstable and finding out the principle of walking is an important matter for optimum locomotion strategy or engineering applications. As one of the challenges, passive dynamic walking has been studied on this. Passive dynamic walking is a walking phenomenon in which a biped walking robot with no actuator walks down a gentle slope. The gait is very smooth (like a human) and much research has been conducted on this. Passive dynamic walking is mainly about bipedalism. Considering that there are more quadruped animals than bipeds and a four-legged robot is easier to control than a two-legged robot, quadrupedal passive dynamic walking must exist. Based on the above, we studied saggital plane quadrupedal passive dynamic walking simulation. However, it was not enough to attribute the result to the existence of quadrupedal passive dynamic walking. In this research, quadrupedal passive dynamic walking is experimentally demonstrated by the four-legged walking robot 'Quartet 4'. Furthermore, changing the type of body joint, slope angle, leg length and variety of gaits (characteristics in four-legged animals) was observed passively. Experimental data could not have enough walking time and could not change parameters continuously. Then, each gait was analyzed quantitatively by the experiment and three-dimensional simulation.
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