Hybrid Soft-Rigid Continuum Robot Inspired by Spider Monkey Tail (2306.11878v1)
Abstract: Spider monkeys (genus Ateles) have a prehensile tail that functions as a flexible, multipurpose fifth limb, enabling them to navigate complex terrains, grasp objects of various sizes, and swing between supports. Inspired by the spider monkey tail, we present a life size hybrid soft-rigid continuum robot designed to imitate the function of the tail. Our planar design has a rigid skeleton with soft elements at its joints that achieve decreasing stiffness along its length. Five manually-operated wires along this central structure control the motion of the tail to form a variety of possible shapes in the 2D plane. Our design also includes a skin-like silicone and fabric tail pad that moves with the tail's tip and assists with object grasping. We quantify the force required to pull various objects out of the robot's grasp and demonstrate that this force increases with the object diameter and the number of edges in a polygonal object. We demonstrate the robot's ability to grasp, move, and release objects of various diameters, as well as to navigate around obstacles, and to retrieve an object after passing under a low passageway.
- “Morphology and evolution of the spider monkey, genus Ateles” in Spider Monkeys: Behavior, Ecology and Evolution of the Genus Ateles, 2008, pp. 19-49
- S.J. Tonge “Image of Brown Spider Monkey” [Online]. Available: https://eol.org/media/8897642., 2014
- MorphoSource “Whole Body Ateles belzebuth” [Online]. Available: https://www.idigbio.org/portal/records/10812957-753c-4b3f-ae3e-947ef01d799f. In MorphoSource, 2000
- “Hybrid Soft Robots Incorporating Soft and Stiff Elements” In IEEE International Conference on Soft Robotics, 2022, pp. 267–272
- H. Mochiyama, M. Gunji and R. Niiyama “Ostrich-Inspired Soft Robotics: A Flexible Bipedal Manipulator for Aggressive Physical Interaction” In Journal of Robotics and Mechatronics 34.2, 2022, pp. 212–218
- “A Woodpecker’s Tongue-inspired, Bendable and Extendable Robot Manipulator with Structural Stiffness” In IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters 7.2, 2022, pp. 3334–3341
- J.D. Holt “Design and Testing of a Biomimetic Pneumatic Actuated Seahorse Tail Inspired Robot” M.S. thesis, Clemson University, 2017.
- “Analysis and Initial Experiments for a Novel Elephant’s Trunk Robot” In IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems, 2000, pp. 330–337
- “Morphology of the Spinal Cord, Spinal Nerves, Caudal Plexus, Tail Segmentation, and Caudal Musculature of the Spider Monkey” In Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine 19.3, 1947, pp. 345–377
- D. Youlatos “Locomotion and positional behavior of spider monkeys” in Spider Monkeys: Behavior, Ecology and Evolution of the Genus Ateles, 2008, pp. 185-219
- E.L. Nelson, G.A. Jendall and D.M. Fragaszy “Goal-Directed Tail Use in Colombian Spider Monkeys (Ateles fusciceps rufiventris) Is Highly Lateralized” In Journal of Comparative Psychology 132.1, 2018, pp. 40–47
- “The Ocean One hands: An adaptive design for robust marine manipulation” In International Journal of Robotics Research 36.2, 2017, pp. 150–166