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A Biological Micro Actuator: Graded and Closed-Loop Control of Insect Leg Motion by Electrical Stimulation of Muscles
Authors:Feng Cao  Chao Zhang  Tat Thang Vo Doan  Yao Li  Daniyal Haider Sangi  Jie Sheng Koh  Ngoc Anh Huynh  Mohamed Fareez Bin Aziz  Hao Yu Choo  Kazuo Ikeda  Pieter Abbeel  Michel M. Maharbiz  Hirotaka Sato
Affiliation:1. School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.; 2. School of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.; 3. Division of Neurosciences, City of Hope Medical Center, Duarte, California, United States of America.; 4. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of California, Berkeley, California, United States of America.; University of Tours, France,
Abstract:In this study, a biological microactuator was demonstrated by closed-loop motion control of the front leg of an insect (Mecynorrhina torquata, beetle) via electrical stimulation of the leg muscles. The three antagonistic pairs of muscle groups in the front leg enabled the actuator to have three degrees of freedom: protraction/retraction, levation/depression, and extension/flexion. We observed that the threshold amplitude (voltage) required to elicit leg motions was approximately 1.0 V; thus, we fixed the stimulation amplitude at 1.5 V to ensure a muscle response. The leg motions were finely graded by alternation of the stimulation frequencies: higher stimulation frequencies elicited larger leg angular displacement. A closed-loop control system was then developed, where the stimulation frequency was the manipulated variable for leg-muscle stimulation (output from the final control element to the leg muscle) and the angular displacement of the leg motion was the system response. This closed-loop control system, with an optimized proportional gain and update time, regulated the leg to set at predetermined angular positions. The average electrical stimulation power consumption per muscle group was 148 µW. These findings related to and demonstrations of the leg motion control offer promise for the future development of a reliable, low-power, biological legged machine (i.e., an insect–machine hybrid legged robot).
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