2015
DOI: 10.1098/rspa.2015.0054
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A study of snake-like locomotion through the analysis of a flexible robot model

Abstract: We examine the problem of snake-like locomotion by studying a system consisting of a planar inextensible elastic rod with adjustable spontaneous curvature, which provides an internal actuation mechanism that mimics muscular action in a snake. Using a Cosserat model, we derive the equations of motion in two special cases: one in which the rod can only move along a prescribed curve, and one in which the rod is constrained to slide longitudinally without slipping laterally, but the path is not fixed a priori (fre… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…This discipline is steeply growing, and from the seminal review paper of Trivedi et al (2008) the field was subject to several evolutions; to date, the most recent review paper on soft robotics (Rus and Tolley, 2015) identifies four possible application domains for soft robots: locomotion, manipulation, wearable, and soft cyborgs. This review agrees with our survey on the most relevant domains influenced by soft robotic, which identified three niches: (1) the terrestrial locomotion, where a great number of bio-inspired (Belanger et al, 2000;Mezoff et al, 2004;Lin et al, 2013;Umedachi et al, 2016) (inspired by worms, caterpillars, and their gaits) (Jayaram and Full, 2016) (insects) (Chrispell et al, 2013;Cicconofri and DeSimone, 2015) (snakes) or build from scratch robots (Kim et al, 2014;Li et al, 2016) are under development; (2) the underwater locomotion (Fiazza et al, 2010), mainly inspired by fishes (Clark et al, 2015), turtles (Song et al, 2016), crabs (Calisti et al, 2016), chephalopods (Arienti et al, 2013;Cianchetti et al, 2015), rays (Urai et al, 2015), or other aquatic animals; and (3) manipulation, either at the level of grippers (Manti et al, 2015;Fakhari et al, 2016;Shintake et al, 2016), arms Elango and Faudzi, 2015;Katzschmann et al, 2015;Deashapriya et al, 2016;Sun et al, 2016), or other devices (Deng et al, 2016).…”
Section: Scenarios Definitionsupporting
confidence: 71%
“…This discipline is steeply growing, and from the seminal review paper of Trivedi et al (2008) the field was subject to several evolutions; to date, the most recent review paper on soft robotics (Rus and Tolley, 2015) identifies four possible application domains for soft robots: locomotion, manipulation, wearable, and soft cyborgs. This review agrees with our survey on the most relevant domains influenced by soft robotic, which identified three niches: (1) the terrestrial locomotion, where a great number of bio-inspired (Belanger et al, 2000;Mezoff et al, 2004;Lin et al, 2013;Umedachi et al, 2016) (inspired by worms, caterpillars, and their gaits) (Jayaram and Full, 2016) (insects) (Chrispell et al, 2013;Cicconofri and DeSimone, 2015) (snakes) or build from scratch robots (Kim et al, 2014;Li et al, 2016) are under development; (2) the underwater locomotion (Fiazza et al, 2010), mainly inspired by fishes (Clark et al, 2015), turtles (Song et al, 2016), crabs (Calisti et al, 2016), chephalopods (Arienti et al, 2013;Cianchetti et al, 2015), rays (Urai et al, 2015), or other aquatic animals; and (3) manipulation, either at the level of grippers (Manti et al, 2015;Fakhari et al, 2016;Shintake et al, 2016), arms Elango and Faudzi, 2015;Katzschmann et al, 2015;Deashapriya et al, 2016;Sun et al, 2016), or other devices (Deng et al, 2016).…”
Section: Scenarios Definitionsupporting
confidence: 71%
“…The presented theoretical results represent an extension and a clarification based on the concept of configurational force of the mathematical models introduced by Gray [1–3] and developed in several later contributions [5,7,13,15,30]. …”
Section: Conclusion With a Discussion On Modelling Snake Motionmentioning
confidence: 66%
“…Therefore, friction at the contact between the snake's skin and the ground is strongly orthotropic, as shown in [57]. The model considered in the present article can be viewed as the extreme situation of orthotropy in which longitudinal and transverse friction are, respectively, null and infinite.…”
Section: Endnotesmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…respectively. Both of these equations are consequences of (12), which henceforth will be assumed to be valid. Note that (21) could also be obtained by splitting the kinematic quantities in (5) into invariant and non-invariant parts.…”
Section: A Energy Balancementioning
confidence: 99%