WORLD’S FIRST WIRELESS FLYING ROBOINSECT (fly) TAKES OFF

RoboFly, the first wireless
insect-sized flying robot, is slightly heavier than a toothpick.
Credit: Mark Stone/University of
Washington
Insect-sized flying robots could
help with time-consuming tasks like surveying crop growth on large farms or
sniffing out gas leaks. These robots soar by fluttering tiny wings because they
are too small to use propellers, like those seen on their larger drone cousins.
Small size is advantageous: These robots are cheap to make and can easily slip
into tight places that are inaccessible to big drones.
But current flying robo-insects are
still tethered to the ground. The electronics they need to power and control
their wings are too heavy for these miniature robots to carry.
Now, engineers at the University of
Washington have for the first time cut the cord and added a brain, allowing
their RoboFly to take its first independent flaps. This might be one small flap
for a robot, but it's one giant leap for robot-kind. The team will present its
findings May 23 at the International Conference on Robotics and Automation in Brisbane,
Australia.
RoboFly is slightly heavier than a
toothpick and is powered by a laser beam. It uses a tiny onboard circuit that
converts the laser energy into enough electricity to operate its wings.
"Before now, the concept of
wireless insect-sized flying robots was science fiction. Would we ever be able
to make them work without needing a wire?" said co-author Sawyer Fuller,
an assistant professor in the UW Department of Mechanical Engineering.
"Our new wireless RoboFly shows they're much closer to real life."
The engineering challenge is the
flapping. Wing flapping is a power-hungry process, and both the power source
and the controller that directs the wings are too big and bulky to ride aboard
a tiny robot. So Fuller's previous robo-insect, the RoboBee, had a leash -- it
received power and control through wires from the ground.
But a flying robot should be able to
operate on its own. Fuller and team decided to use a narrow invisible laser
beam to power their robot. They pointed the laser beam at a photovoltaic cell,
which is attached above RoboFly and converts the laser light into electricity.
"It was the most efficient way
to quickly transmit a lot of power to RoboFly without adding much weight,"
said co-author Shyam Gollakota, an associate professor in the UW's Paul G.
Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering.
Still, the laser alone does not
provide enough voltage to move the wings. That's why the team designed a
circuit that boosted the seven volts coming out of the photovoltaic cell up to
the 240 volts needed for flight.
To give RoboFly control over its own
wings, the engineers provided a brain: They added a microcontroller to the same
circuit.
"The microcontroller acts like
a real fly's brain telling wing muscles when to fire," said co-author
Vikram Iyer, a doctoral student in the UW Department of Electrical Engineering.
"On RoboFly, it tells the wings things like 'flap hard now' or 'don't
flap.'"
Specifically, the controller sends
voltage in waves to mimic the fluttering of a real insect's wings.
"It uses pulses to shape the
wave," said Johannes James, the lead author and a mechanical engineering
doctoral student. "To make the wings flap forward swiftly, it sends a
series of pulses in rapid succession and then slows the pulsing down as you get
near the top of the wave. And then it does this in reverse to make the wings
flap smoothly in the other direction."
For now, RoboFly can only take off
and land. Once its photovoltaic cell is out of the direct line of sight of the
laser, the robot runs out of power and lands. But the team hopes to soon be
able to steer the laser so that RoboFly can hover and fly around.
While RoboFly is currently powered
by a laser beam, future versions could use tiny batteries or harvest energy
from radio frequency signals, Gollakota said. That way, their power source can
be modified for specific tasks.
Future RoboFlies can also look
forward to more advanced brains and sensor systems that help the robots
navigate and complete tasks on their own, Fuller said.
"I'd really like to make one
that finds methane leaks," he said. "You could buy a suitcase full of
them, open it up, and they would fly around your building looking for plumes of
gas coming out of leaky pipes. If these robots can make it easy to find leaks,
they will be much more likely to be patched up, which will reduce greenhouse
emissions. This is inspired by real flies, which are really good at flying
around looking for smelly things. So we think this is a good application for
our RoboFly.
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