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A dexterous and compliant aerial continuum manipulator for cluttered and constrained environments

Professor Peng Lu and his team, from the Department of Mechanical Engineering, have developed a highly dexterous and complaint aerial manipulator (Aerial Elephant Trunk). The research was published by Nature Communications on 21 Jan 2025.


Details of the publication:

Rui Peng, Yu Wang, Minghao Lu & Peng Lu. A dexterous and compliant aerial continuum manipulator for cluttered and constrained environments. Nat Commun 16, 889 (2025).


Article in Nature Communications:


Video of the publication:


Abstract:

Aerial manipulators can manipulate objects while flying, allowing them to perform tasks in dangerous or inaccessible areas. Advanced aerial manipulation systems are often based on rigid-link mechanisms, but the balance between dexterity and payload capacity limits their broader application. Combining unmanned aerial vehicles with continuum manipulators emerges as a solution to this trade-off, but these systems face challenges with large actuation systems and unstable control. To address these challenges, we propose Aerial Elephant Trunk, an aerial continuum manipulator inspired by the elephant trunk, featuring a small-scale quadrotor and a dexterous, compliant tendon-driven continuum arm for versatile operation in both indoor and outdoor settings. We develop state estimation for the quadrotor using an Extended Kalman Filter, shape estimation for the continuum arm based on piecewise constant curvature, and whole-body motion planning using minimum jerk principles. Through comprehensive fundamental verifications, we demonstrate that our system can adapt to various constrained environments, such as navigating through narrow holes, tubes, or crevices, and can handle a range of objects, including slender, deformable, irregular, or heavy items. Our system can potentially be deployed in challenging conditions, such as pipeline maintenance or electricity line inspection at high altitudes.



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