Published October 25, 2022
| Version v1
Publication
SOPHIE: Soft and Flexible Aerial Vehicle for Physical Interaction With the Environment
Description
This letter presents the first design of a soft and
lightweight UAV, entirely 3D-printed in flexible filament. The
drone's flexible arms are equipped with a tendon-actuated bend ing system, which is used for applications that require physical
interaction with the environment. The flexibility of the UAV can be
controlled during the additive manufacturing process by adjusting
the infill rateρTPU distribution. However, the increase in flexibility
implies difficulties in controlling the UAV, as well as structural,
aerodynamic, and aeroelastic effects. This article provides insight
into the dynamics of the system and validates the flyability of the
vehicle for densities as low as 6%. Within this range, quasi-static
arm deformations can be considered, thus the autopilot is fed back
through a static arm deflection model. At lower densities, strong
non-linear elastic dynamics appear, which translates to complex
modeling, and it is suggested to switch to data-based approaches.
Moreover, this work demonstrates the ability of the soft UAV to
perform full-body perching, specifically landing and stabilizing on
pipelines and irregular surfaces without the need for an auxiliary
system
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://idus.us.es/handle//11441/138314
- URN
- urn:oai:idus.us.es:11441/138314
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- USE