Tiny robots climb walls carrying more than 100 times their weight
Tiny robots climb walls carrying more than 100 times
their weight
18:30 24 April 2015 by Aviva Rutkin
Mighty things come in small packages. The little robots
in this video can haul things that weigh over 100 times more than themselves.
The super-strong bots – built by mechanical engineers at
Stanford University in California – will be presented next month at the
International Conference on Robotics and Automation in Seattle, Washington.
The secret is in the adhesives on the robots' feet. Their
design is inspired by geckos, which have climbing skills that are legendary in
the animal kingdom. The adhesives are covered in minute rubber spikes that grip
firmly onto the wall as the robot climbs. When pressure is applied, the spikes
bend, increasing their surface area and thus their stickiness. When the robot
picks its foot back up, the spikes straighten out again and detach easily.
The bots also move in a style that is borrowed from
biology. Like an inchworm, one pad scooches the robot forward while the other
stays in place to support the heavy load. This helps the robot avoid falls from
missing its step and park without using up precious power.
Heavy lifting
All this adds up to robots with serious power. For
example, one 9-gram bot can hoist more than a kilogram as it climbs. In this
video it's carrying StickyBot, the Stanford lab's first ever robot gecko, built
in 2006.
Another tiny climbing bot weighs just 20 milligrams but
can carry 500 milligrams, a load about the size of a small paper clip. Engineer
Elliot Hawkes built the bot under a microscope, using tweezers to put the parts
together.
The most impressive feat of strength comes from a ground
bot nicknamed μTug. Although it weighs just 12 grams, it can drag a weight
that's 2000 times heavier – "the same as you pulling around a blue
whale", explains David Christensen – who is in the same lab.
In future, the team thinks that machines like these could
be useful for hauling heavy things in factories or on construction sites. They
could also be useful in emergencies: for example, one might carry a rope ladder
up to a person trapped on a high floor in a burning building.
But for tasks like these, the engineers may have to start
attaching their adhesives to robots that are even larger – and thus more
powerful. "If you leave yourself a little more room, you can do some
pretty amazing things," says Christensen.
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