A robot takes a swim
PoseiDrone, a robot whose body was inspired by the bodies of octopus and squid, navigates a rocky underwater world.
From NYTimes by Katherine Harmon Courage
For years, roboticists have yearned to develop a flexible machine that can explore tight spaces, repair dangerous equipment and potentially even conform to the human body.
Now one of the first members of this new breed of robots is almost here.
Yes, it is an octopus.
Because
octopuses can swim, crawl and manipulate objects, they make “the ideal
underwater robot,” said Francesco Giorgio-Serchi, a scientist at the Research Center on Sea Technologies and Marine Robotics here, who is working on the project.
In a small seaside laboratory, he and others have been tinkering away on a prototype of a multiarmed robot they call PoseiDrone for the sea god Poseidon.
Pieces of half-built arms are scattered about, and an inflatable kiddie pool sits between tables.
It was in that modest body of water that their robotic octopus got its sea legs, as it were.
It
did so well in the pool that the researchers borrowed a small boat and
deployed it in the Ligurian Sea, still attached to their controls via
cables.
It successfully swam in the waves and adeptly crawled along the
rocky bottom.
Robotic
technology is generally based on hard materials — a logical approach,
because they can be controlled with precise movements and low computing
power.
Soft robotics is something else altogether, promising “the
mechanical versatility you find in natural organisms,” said Carmel
Majidi, a mechanical engineer at Carnegie Mellon University’s Robotics
Institute who is working to develop sensitive artificial skin and strong artificial muscles.
Imagine
a roving vacuum cleaner that could literally squeeze itself into nooks
where dust bunnies hide.
Or more grandly, Dr. Majidi said, exploration
vehicles, construction drones, “wearable robots and maybe even
implantable robots.”
Early
efforts in the field date to the 1940s, when scientists developed
pneumatic “artificial muscles” to be used in traditional robots.
Progress has inched along since then, producing small-scale projects
like scooting soft-bodied caterpillars and pneumatic quadrupeds.
But the advent of 3D printing has greatly accelerated the chase.
Dr.
Majidi said the technology had been “a bit of a game-changer,” enabling
just about any research team — or garage tinkerer — to make new molds
to create stretchy prototypes, a process that just a few years ago was
slow and costly.
A group at Harvard used molds from a 3D printer to create a prototype of a soft, octopuslike four-legged robot
that could be controlled via tubes of liquid or air.
And here in Italy,
Dr. Giorgio-Serchi and his colleagues recently acquired a 3D printer
that allows them to design, experiment and revise quickly.
They
aim to replicate the key features of an octopus: eight arms to provide
an almost infinite range of motion; the ability to squeeze through any
opening larger than its chitinous beak; and an unusual nervous system in
which the arms are semiautonomous and the central brain is thought to
do little more than issue general commands (“Arms, let’s go catch that
crab!”).
To
make quicker headway, some of the PoseiDrone’s components, such as the
electronics, remain hard for now.
The exterior will be silicone — a
material whose density, like that of an octopus, is similar to water’s.
The
drone’s potential missions include inspecting and repairing underwater
turbines, wave-energy generators, oil rigs, ship hulls and perhaps
fishing nets.
In contrast to a hard-bodied underwater bot, which would
need to hover at a safe distance from such equipment, the PoseiDrone
should be able to attach itself directly without damaging the equipment
or itself, Dr. Giorgio-Serchi said.
Sending robots down to perform
dangerous tasks could also help keep human divers safer.
The drone can already crawl, swim and even carry small tools.
But it is not yet ready to repair a turbine.
PoseiDrone: a soft-bodied ROV
And
although the researchers are applying for patents, it is still a crude
specimen, a robotic Frankenstein’s monster bridging the eras of hard and
squishy — currently only 80 percent soft materials.
“It’s
still very much a work in progress,” Dr. Majidi said. And Mark R.
Cutkosky, a professor at the Stanford School of Engineering, said: “How
do we build stretchy conductors? That’s still a very open question.”
“It
sounds pretty prosaic,” he added, “yet one of the biggest challenges is
just wiring.
This was true 20 years ago, and it’s still true.”
The
PoseiDrone’s movements still rely on external control of conventional
motors and actuators.
Nevertheless,
the octopus robot is more sophisticated than a standard robot covered
in rubber, Dr. Giorgio-Serchi said.
Its abundance of soft, elastic
materials enables it to do things most other robots cannot — much as
stiff-jointed humans cannot do what an octopus can, despite our soft
skin and muscles.
“Without the soft part,” Dr. Giorgio-Serchi said, “it would just be a pile of motors and cables.”
Also
like real cephalopods, the PoseiDrone, whose body is about the length
of an adult human hand, could be just about any scale — from fractions
of an inch to dozens of feet across.
A larger version is in the works.
And perhaps not reassuring to those who fear a robot uprising, the
bigger it is, “the easier it is to make it stronger — and fast,” Dr.
Giorgio-Serchi said.
Virtually
any conceivable form is now just a click away, so why do researchers
focus on animal models? Dr. Cutkosky, who has built a climbing robot with gecko-inspired grippers, says we inevitably look to the natural world for inspiration.
And
caution.
Comparing the octopus robot to its real-life counterpart, he
said, “It’s probably a good thing they’re confined to water.”
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