Abstract
In-pipe robots must navigate narrow, curved passages where rigid mechanisms often require bulky steering units. Soft crawlers offer better compliance but typically rely on multiple actuators or reconfigurable contacts to achieve multi-directional motion. Drawing inspiration from biological soft crawlers that exploit directional friction and coordinated anchor-slip patterns, this study focuses on locomotion principles observed in caterpillars, water boatmen, and whirligig beetles. Based on these bioinspired concepts, we present a tendon-driven soft in-pipe robot that combines continuum bending-twisting deformation with modular anisotropic friction pads (AFPs), enabling three locomotion modes using only two motors. AFP inclination, curvature, and ridge geometry were optimized through friction tests, constant-curvature modeling, and finite element analysis to enhance directional adhesion on flat and curved surfaces. A deformation-based locomotion framework was developed to couple tendon actuation with friction orientation, achieving longitudinal crawling, transverse translation, in-place rotation, and smooth transitions via programmed twisting. Driving experiments demonstrated repeatable anchor-slip locomotion with average speeds of 28.6 mm/s, 15.7 mm/s, and 11.5°/s for the three modes. Pipe tests in straight, curved, and T-junction sections further validated stable contact and reliable gait transitions. These findings highlight the potential of friction-programmed continuum robots as compact, bioinspired platforms for advanced in-pipe inspection and diagnostic tasks.