Abstract

Vibration driven robots such as the so called bristlebot and kilobot utilize periodic forced vibration of an internal mass to achieve directed locomotion. These robots are supported on an elastic element such as bristles or cilia and contain an internal mass that is driven to oscillate at a high frequency. Besides well known applications in investigating swarming behavior, such robots have potential applications in rescue operations in rubble, inspections of pipes and other inaccessible confined areas and in medical devices where conventional means of locomotion is ineffective. Bristlebot or its commercially available variants such as hexbugs are popular toy robots. Despite the apparent simplicity of these robots, their dynamic behavior is very complex. Vibration robots have attracted surprisingly few analytical models, those models that exist can only explain some regimes of locomotion. In this paper, a wide range of motion dynamics of a bristlebot is explored using a mathematical model which accounts for slip-stick motion of the bristles with the substrate. Analytical conditions for the system to exhibit a particular type of motion are formulated and the system of equations defining the motion are solved numerically using these conditions. The numerical simulations show transitions in the kinds of locomotion of a bristlebot as a function of the forcing frequency. These different kinds of locomotion include stick-slip and pure slip motions along with the important phenomenon of the reversal of the direction of motion of the robot. In certain ranges of frequencies, the robot can lose contact with the ground and ‘jump’. These different regimes of locomotion are a result of the nonlinear vibrations of the robot and the friction between the robot’s bristles and the ground. The results of this paper can potentially lead to more versatile vibration robots with predictable and controllable dynamics.

This content is only available via PDF.
You do not currently have access to this content.