A team of U.S. scientists has synthesized and implemented high-performance six-degree-of-freedom flight controllers for the Bee ++ , an insect-scale flying robot driven by four independently-actuated flapping wings.
Researchers have been trying to develop artificial flying insects for more than three decades.
They could someday be used for many applications, including for artificial pollination, search and rescue efforts in tight spaces, biological research, or environmental monitoring, including in hostile environments.
But just getting the tiny robots to take off and land required development of controllers that act the way an insect brain does.
“It’s a mixture of robotic design and control,” said Dr. Néstor Pérez-Arancibia, a researcher at Washington State University.
“Control is highly mathematical, and you design a sort of artificial brain. Some people call it the hidden technology, but without those simple brains, nothing would work.”
Dr. Pérez-Arancibia and colleagues initially developed a two-winged robotic bee, but it was limited in its movement.
In 2019, they built a four-winged robot light enough to take off.
To do two maneuvers known as pitching or rolling, they make the front wings flap in a different way than the back wings for pitching and the right wings flap in a different way than the left wings for rolling, creating torque that rotates the robot about its two main horizontal axes.
But being able to control the complex yaw motion is tremendously important. Without it, robots spin out of control, unable to focus on a point. Then they crash.
“If you can’t control yaw, you’re super limited. If you’re a bee, here is the flower, but if you can’t control the yaw, you are spinning all the time as you try to get there,” Dr. Pérez-Arancibia said.
“Having all degrees of movement is also critically important for evasive maneuvers or tracking objects.”
“The system is highly unstable, and the problem is super hard. For…
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