Erik Demaine describes how the prototype robot can automatically fold itself into an airplane or an origami boat. Video: Melanie Gonick; original footage: E. Hawkes/B. An/N.M. Benbernou/H. Tanaka/S. Kim/E.D. Demaine/D. Rus/R.J. Wood
Self-folding sheets of a plastic-like
material point the way to robots that can assume any conceivable 3-D
structure.
Larry Hardesty, MIT News Office
By combining origami and electrical
engineering, researchers at MIT and Harvard are working to develop
the ultimate reconfigurable robot — one that can turn into
absolutely anything. The researchers have developed algorithms that,
given a three-dimensional shape, can determine how to reproduce it by
folding a sheet of semi-rigid material with a distinctive pattern of
flexible creases. To test out their theories, they built a prototype
that can automatically assume the shape of either an origami boat or
a paper airplane when it receives different electrical signals. The
researchers reported their results in the July 13 issue of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
As director of the Distributed Robotics
Laboratory at the Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence
Laboratory (CSAIL), Professor Daniela Rus researches systems of
robots that can work together to tackle complicated tasks. One of the
big research areas in distributed robotics is what’s called
“programmable matter,” the idea that small, uniform robots could
snap together like intelligent Legos to create larger, more versatile
robots.
The U.S. Defense Department’s Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) has a Programmable Matter
project that funds a good deal of research in the field and specifies
“particles … which can reversibly assemble into complex 3D
objects.” But that approach turns out to have drawbacks, Rus says.
“Most people are looking at separate modules, and they’re really
worried about how these separate modules aggregate themselves and
find other modules to connect with to create the shape that they’re
supposed to create,” Rus says. But, she adds, “actively gathering
modules to build up a shape bottom-up, from scratch, is just really
hard given the current state of the art in our hardware.”
A new wrinkle
So Rus has been investigating
alternative approaches, which don’t require separate modules to
locate and connect to each other before beginning to assemble more
complex shapes. Fortunately, also at CSAIL is Erik Demaine, who
joined the MIT faculty at age 20 in 2001, becoming the youngest
professor in MIT history. One of Demaine’s research areas is the
mathematics of origami, and he and Rus hatched the idea of a flat
sheet of material with tiny robotic muscles, or actuators, which
could fold itself into useful objects. In principle, flat sheets with
flat actuators should be much easier to fabricate than
three-dimensional robots with enough intelligence that they can
locate and attach to each other.
About a year ago, Demaine and several
colleagues — including his dad, who’s a visiting scientist at
CSAIL, master’s student Aviv Ovadya, and Nadia Benbernou, a PhD
student in applied mathematics who’s a co-author on the new paper —
proved that a large enough sheet creased in what’s called the “box
pleat pattern” could be folded into a close approximation of any
possible three-dimensional shape. The box pleat pattern divides the
sheet into squares, each of which has a diagonal crease across it;
but if two squares share an edge, their diagonal creases are mirror
images. This paper marked the first time that the universality of a
crease pattern had been shown, although Demaine and his collaborators
have since proved that other crease patterns are universal as well.
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Studded with magnets and electronic
muscles known as actuators, a prototype robot developed at MIT can
automatically fold itself into an airplane or an origami boat. Credit
MIT.
|
Based on this result, Demaine, Rus,
Harvard’s Robert Wood, and others developed algorithms that, given
an arbitrary three-dimensional shape, could generate a sequence of
folds that would produce it from a box-pleated sheet.
But as yet, no robotic system existed
that could execute that sequence of folds automatically. In
principle, a universal origami robot would have actuators on both
sides of every crease, so that the sheet could fold in either
direction at any point. But a system that complex is difficult to
build, and before undertaking it, the researchers hoped to
demonstrate the viability of their approach.
Theory into practice
So they designed yet another set of
algorithms that, given sequences of folds for several different
shapes, would determine the minimum number of actuators necessary to
produce all of them. Then they set about building a robot that could
actually assume multiple origami shapes. Their prototype, made from
glass-fiber and hydrocarbon materials, with an elastic plastic at the
creases, is divided into 16 squares about a centimeter across, each
of which is further divided into two triangles. The actuators consist
of a shape-memory alloy — a metal that changes shape when
electricity is applied to it. Each triangle also has a magnet in it,
so that it can attach to its neighbors once the right folds have been
performed.
The sheet is too small — or,
depending on your perspective, the triangles are too big — to do
anything very useful yet. But, in principle, it’s possible to build
either a similar sheet with much smaller moving parts, or a larger
sheet with similar-sized moving parts. With a finer-grained sheet,
“you could imagine downloading the new iPhone,” Demaine says. “In
the same way that you download the latest CD from your favorite
artist totally electronically, you could imagine downloading shapes
electronically, and programming hardware the same way you program
software.” Larger sheets could enable “a tent that can adapt its
shape according to the wind so that it doesn’t blow over,”
Demaine says, or “a solar cell that can adjust its shape to the sun
and the cloud patterns and whatnot.”
“It’s a very nice merger of the
abstract mathematical theory and the practical world,” says Joseph
O’Rourke, the chair of the computer science department at Smith
College, who was one of the referees for the PNAS paper. “It may be
appropriate to say it’s some type of breakthrough.” O’Rourke
points out, however, that Demaine’s universality proof relied on
the assumption that the triangles in the box-pleated material were
themselves somewhat flexible, which may not be the case with, for
instance, tiny sheets of material carved out of silicon.
Demaine agrees but says that he and his
group are approaching the problem from two directions. On one hand,
they’re trying to mathematically model the flexibility of the
triangles, so that the folding algorithms can take that into account.
On the other, they’re taking some tentative first steps toward a
theory of origami with rigid materials. “We are sorely lacking in
rigid-origami theory, as Joe points out and I'd be quick to agree,”
Demaine says.
http://newsoffice.mit.edu/2010/programmable-matter-0805
http://newsoffice.mit.edu/2010/programmable-matter-0805
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