3D-Printed Giraffe Neck Aims to Bring Flexibility, Impact-Resistance to Future Robotic Platforms

Inspired by nature, this soft robotic neck could strike a balance between traditional rigid robots and completely-soft tentacle-bots.

ghalfacree
almost 4 years ago Robotics / 3D Printing

A team of researchers at the Tokyo Institute of Technology have developed a bio-inspired robot designed to replicate the functionality of a giraffe's neck — in the hope of using it as a development platform for new robotic mechanisms.

"The neck of a giraffe has excellent characteristics that can serve as a good alternative for designing a large robotic mechanism. For example, the neck can rapidly move when performing necking, a motion where the giraffes strike each other’s necks," the researchers write in the abstract to their paper, referring to the neck-based combat, which takes place between males as a way of asserting dominance. "Furthermore, the neck of a giraffe helps prevent impacts and adapts to the shape and hardness of the opponent’s neck during necking."

Looking like something out of Horizon: Zero Dawn, this robotic giraffe offers a range of advantages over traditional designs. (📷: Niikura et al)

Colliding two robots together, by contrast, doesn't usually end well for either robot — so Atsuhiko Niikura and colleagues set about creating a half-scale robotic replica to see how many of a giraffe's attributes could be brought from the biological word to the robotic one.

"Roboticists and animal anatomists have combined efforts to develop a powerful and flexible long musculoskeletal robot based on the anatomy of a giraffe neck," the team explains. "The musculoskeletal robot prototype is actuated using thin McKibben pneumatic artificial muscles that bend easily."

The robot is capable of deformation and absorbs impacts, much like its biological counterpart. (📷: Niikura)

The artificial muscles drive a skeleton created using a 3D printer, while a gravity compensation mechanism based on tensioned rubber mimics the nuchal ligaments found in the real deal. The resulting robot offers impressive flexibility, capable of a range of movements — including absorbing and safely adapting its shape when exposed to an external force.

The team's work has been published in the journal IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters under closed-access terms; more information is available on IEEE Spectrum as part of the IEEE Journal Watch series.

ghalfacree

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