Robo fly takes first controlled flight

Robo fly takes first  controlled flight
x
Highlights

Washington (PTI): Harvard researchers have successfully designed, manufactured and flown a tiny fly-inspired aerial robot. The demonstration of the...

Washington (PTI): Harvard researchers have successfully designed, manufactured and flown a tiny fly-inspired aerial robot. The demonstration of the first controlled flight of an insect-sized robot is the culmination of more than a decade's work, led by researchers at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard.

robo fly

"This is what I have been trying to do for literally the last 12 years," said Robert J Wood, principal investigator of the National Science Foundation-supported RoboBee project. Inspired by the biology of a fly, with submillimeter-scale anatomy and two wafer-thin wings that flap almost invisibly, 120 times per second, the tiny device not only represents the absolute cutting edge of micromanufacturing and control systems.

"We had to develop solutions from scratch, for everything. We would get one component working, but when we moved onto the next, five new problems would arise. It was a moving target," said Wood. Flight muscles, for instance, don't come prepackaged for robots the size of a fingertip.

"Large robots can run on electromagnetic motors, but at this small scale you have to come up with an alternative, and there wasn't one," said co-lead author Kevin Y Ma, a graduate student at SEAS.A The tiny robot flaps its wings with piezoelectric actuators - strips of ceramic that expand and contract when an electric field is applied.

Thin hinges of plastic embedded within the carbon fiber body frame serve as joints, and a delicately balanced control system commands the rotational motions in the flapping-wing robot, with each wing controlled independently in real-time.

Show Full Article
Print Article
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENTS