Bee+: A 95-Mg Four-Winged Insect-Scale Flying Robot Driven by Twinned Unimorph Actuators

Xiufeng Yang1, Ying Chen1, Longlong Chang1, Ariel Calderon1, Nestor O Perez-Arancibia2

  • 1University of Southern California
  • 2University of Southern California (USC)

Details

11:45 - 12:00 | Tue 5 Nov | L1-R4 | TuAT4.4

Session: Award Session I

Abstract

We introduce Bee+, a 95-mg four-winged microrobot with improved controllability and open-loop-response characteristics with respect to those exhibited by state-of-the-art two-winged microrobots with the same size and similar weight (i.e., the 75-mg Harvard RoboBee). The key innovation that made possible the development of Bee+ is the introduction of an extremely light (28-mg) pair of twinned unimorph actuators, which enabled the design of a new microrobotic mechanism that flaps four wings independently. A first main advantage of the proposed design, compared to those of two-winged flyers, is that by increasing the number of actuators from two to four, the number of direct control inputs increases from three to four when simple sinusoidal excitations are employed. A second advantage of Bee+ is that its four-wing configuration and flapping mode naturally damp the rotational disturbances that commonly affect the yaw degree of freedom of two-winged microrobots. In addition, the proposed design greatly reduces the complexity of the associated fabrication process compared to those of other microrobots, as the unimorph actuators are fairly easy to build. Lastly, we hypothesize that given the relatively low wing-loading affecting their flapping mechanisms, the life expectancy of Bee+s must be considerably higher than those of the two-winged counterparts. The functionality and basic capabilities of the robot are demonstrated through a set of simple control experiments.