Compact and foldable, portable drones are great for carrying – but can the advantages of a folding drone be realized during flight? Researchers at the University of Zurich, with others, have come up with a drone that folds during flight to get through tight spaces. This type of drone might easily be used for search and rescue or inspection purposes.
DroneLife: What gave you and the team the idea of a drone that folds in flight?
Davide Falanga: In our lab, we focus a lot on robotics for search and rescue, and in the past we already tackled the problem of letting a quadrotor fly through narrow gaps using onboard sensing and computing. However, that approach required the vehicle to execute a very aggressive maneuver, which requires quite some space before and after the gap, and can be potentially dangerous for the robot. This motivated us to think about a different solution to this problem, and we came up with the idea of adapting the drone’s structure to the gap to traverse it.
It looks from the video that the drone can rotate or collapse in a number of ways. Can you tell us more about how it works?
Davide Falanga: It is mechanically very simple: it has the standard structure of a quad-rotor, with the difference that each arm is connected to the main body through a servo-motor. Each servo-motor is controlled independently, and therefore the robot can assume potentially any configuration. The control system is aware of the drone’s morphology.
What is next for the project?
Davide Falanga: We plan to investigate novel folding techniques, as for example 3D folding, which can be beneficial for other tasks such as flying at very high speed. Also, we want to increase the level of autonomy of the vehicle (which is currently completely autonomous, since it does not require any human intervention and it is not controlled through a remote or a joy pad). To this aim, we plan to enable our drone to accept high-level commands, such as “explore this building and come back”, which requires it to analyze the building to find an aperture to enter it, decide the best morphology to traverse the gap, explore an environment which is not known in advance, and find its way back to complete the mission.
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