Design and Development of Multileg Locomotive Robot for Life Threaten Areas
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.52584/QRJ.2002.02Keywords:
Multileg Robot, Surveillance robot, Lifesaving robot, Forward and Kinematic Analysis, Gait StabilityAbstract
The world of technology is the workbook of crises waiting to be solved, where robotics is the top-most essential technology, which is utilized for surveillance purposes to detect catastrophic events, such as detecting poisonous and explosive gases in mines, monitoring nuclear sites for contaminations and crops to determine the existence of biological threats, and inspecting buildings for gas leaks to protect human lives. The multi-legged robot has numerous capabilities, such as carrying heavy payloads, executing long-duration missions, and interacting with the environment. However, their bizarre mobility to reach everywhere in any complex territory makes them phenomenal. On the contrary, due to variation in its limb structure, the motion has several possibilities, which complicates its overall movement. For this reason, this research presents the precise locomotion of the multileg robot on any terrain. This work initially concentrates on the peculiar gaits planning, and later the kinematics analysis is carried out for the three jointed legs of a Multileg robot’s locomotion on bumpy grounds. Besides, an attempt has also been made to achieve forward kinematic analysis on the design for validation. Moreover, this paper also exhibits the model simulation through the simulation software to examine the theoretical and practical conclusive results. The motion simulation was implemented, and the results are satisfactory.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Copyright (c) This is an open access article published by QUEST Research Journal. QUEST Research Journal holds the rights of all the published articles. Authors are required to transfer copyrights to journal to make sure that the article is solely published in QUEST Research Journal; however, the authors and readers may freely read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts of the articles without asking prior permission from the publisher or the author.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.