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The authors describe rubber actuators using a hydrogen storage alloy for an in-pipe inspection robot, which is capable of moving inside pipelines with inner diameter as small as 2 in. Rubber actuators with both stretching and shrinking capability are shown for realization of such a robot. The proposed robot uses twelve actuators, including six kinds of independently controlled actuators, so that it si more flexible and adaptable in motion: it can move in an inchworm mode through pipelines, it is adaptive for changing pipe diameters, and it is able to pass over the L- and T-joints of pipelines. The robot actuators can initially be achieved and prepared by hydrogen gas. The control method is also shown, with a T-joint movement as an example.>
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Toshio Fukuda
Nagoya University
Hidemi HOSOKAI
Mitsunori Uemura
Ritsumeikan University
Tokyo University of Science
Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology
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Fukuda et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a16cc49c23c548e2a7b8c9a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/robot.1989.100242