KIMLAB (Kinetic Intelligent Machine LAB), University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, USA


Ringbot: monocycle robot with legs

Feb 7, 2024

In this video, we present Ringbot, a novel leg-wheel transformer robot incorporating a monocycle mechanism with legs. Ringbot aims to provide versatile mobility by replacing the driver and driving components of a conventional monocycle vehicle with legs mounted on compact driving modules inside the wheel.

Ringbot represents KIMLAB's "ingenuity", demonstrating our ability to bring a sci-fi-like mobile robot to the real world through robotics.

Thank you for watching this video! If you're interested in exploring the technical details further, you can find them in the following link.

- Paper
K. G. Gim and J. Kim, "Ringbot: Monocycle Robot With Legs," in IEEE Transactions on Robotics, doi: 10.1109/TRO.2024.3362326

ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10423226
 

Self-rising bipedal robot for embracing fall impact and fall detection with multimodal sensing

Jan 14, 2026

In this video, we present KIMLAB's recent work toward hardware-based reinforcement learning (RL) and the development of character-like bipedal robots. We explore the use of HybridLeg as a platform for expressive character robots such as Olaf or Snogie, equipped with a lantern-shaped, sensorized mechanical cover that can safely support whole-body contacts.Humanoid robots are inherently unstable, making fall management a critical challenge, especially for on-hardware RL, where falls are frequent and unavoidable. To address this, we introduce a protective mechanical design that mitigates impact damage during falls while enabling the robot to autonomously recover to a standing posture. This capability allows the robot to self-reset and reinitialize after each trial without human intervention, which is essential for scalable real-world hardware RL. The system integrates a multimodal fall detection framework combining inertial, proprioceptive, and acoustic sensing, along with an improved stance phase detection algorithm. This work highlights a practical pathway toward robust, self-recovering humanoid platforms suitable for long-horizon, real-world reinforcement learning experiments.This work was presented at SII 2026, and the paper will be available at ieeexplore soon.
  • Kenta Hirashima, Daniel Campos Zamora, Kevin Gim, Joohyung Kim, “Self-Rising Bipedal Robot for Embracing Fall Impact and Fall Detection with Multimodal Sensing,” IEEE/SICE International Symposium on System Integration (SII 2026), 2026
If you are interested in humanoid locomotion and unique leg mechanisms, we hope you enjoy this video and our HybridLeg approach, along with the authors’ previous paper below.
  • Implementation of Untethered Biped Robots Utilizing Serial-Parallel Hybrid Leg Mechanisms
ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10769967
 
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