This paper addresses walking and balancing in rough terrain for legged locomotion in planetary exploration as an alternative to the commonly used wheeled locomotion. In contrast to the latter, where active balancing is not necessary, legged locomotion requires constant effort to keep the main body stabilized during motion. While common quadrupedal robots require to carefully plan motions through torque control and force distribution, this paper presents an approach where elastic elements in the drive train function as an intrinsic balancing component that allows to ignore inaccuracies in the locomotion pattern and passively accommodate for terrain unevenness. The approach proposes a static walking gait algorithm, which is formulated for a general quadrupedal robot, and a hardware foot design to support the locomotion pattern. The method is experimentally tested on an elastically actuated quadrupedal robot.
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