Optimization and control of actuator networks in variable geometry truss systems using genetic algorithms

Gu, J., Ye, Z., Rae-Grant, T. et al. Optimization and control of actuator networks in variable geometry truss systems using genetic algorithms. Nat Commun 16, 8432 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-63373-7

A robot’s morphology is pivotal to its functionality, as biological organisms demonstrate through shape adjustments – octopi squeeze through small apertures, and caterpillars use peristaltic transformations to navigate complex environments. While existing robotic systems struggle to achieve precise volumetric transformations, Variable Geometry Trusses offer rich morphing capabilities by coordinating hundreds of actuating beams. However, control complexity scales exponentially with beam count, limiting implementations to trusses with only a handful of beams or to designs where only a subset of beams are actuable. Previous work introduced the metatruss, a truss robot that simplifies control by grouping actuators into interconnected pneumatic control networks, but relies on manual network design and control sequences. Here, we introduce a multi-objective optimization framework based on a tailored genetic algorithm to automate actuator grouping, contraction ratios, and actuation timing. We develop a highly damped dynamic simulator that balances computational efficiency with physical accuracy and validate our approach with experimental prototypes. Across multiple tasks, we demonstrate that the metatruss achieves complex shape adaptations with minimal control units. Our results reveal an optimal number of control networks, beyond which additional networks yield diminishing performance gains.

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MorphingSkin: A Skin-like Platform that Integrates Multimodal Hydraulic Actuators Based on Flexible Electroosmotic Pumps

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CompAct: Designing Interconnected Compliant Mechanisms with Targeted Actuation Transmissions