235 research outputs found

    A survey of dextrous manipulation

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    technical reportThe development of mechanical end effectors capable of dextrous manipulation is a rapidly growing and quite successful field of research. It has in some sense put the focus on control issues, in particular, how to control these remarkably humanlike manipulators to perform the deft movement that we take for granted in the human hand. The kinematic and control issues surrounding manipulation research are clouded by more basic concerns such as: what is the goal of a manipulation system, is the anthropomorphic or functional design methodology appropriate, and to what degree does the control of the manipulator depend on other sensory systems. This paper examines the potential of creating a general purpose, anthropomorphically motivated, dextrous manipulation system. The discussion will focus on features of the human hand that permit its general usefulness as a manipulator. A survey of machinery designed to emulate these capabilities is presented. Finally, the tasks of grasping and manipulation are examined from the control standpoint to suggest a control paradigm which is descriptive, yet flexible and computationally efficient1

    Performance of modified jatropha oil in combination with hexagonal boron nitride particles as a bio-based lubricant for green machining

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    This study evaluates the machining performance of newly developed modified jatropha oils (MJO1, MJO3 and MJO5), both with and without hexagonal boron nitride (hBN) particles (ranging between 0.05 and 0.5 wt%) during turning of AISI 1045 using minimum quantity lubrication (MQL). The experimental results indicated that, viscosity improved with the increase in MJOs molar ratio and hBN concentration. Excellent tribological behaviours is found to correlated with a better machining performance were achieved by MJO5a with 0.05 wt%. The MJO5a sample showed the lowest values of cutting force, cutting temperature and surface roughness, with a prolonged tool life and less tool wear, qualifying itself to be a potential alternative to the synthetic ester, with regard to the environmental concern

    The role of morphology of the thumb in anthropomorphic grasping : a review

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    The unique musculoskeletal structure of the human hand brings in wider dexterous capabilities to grasp and manipulate a repertoire of objects than the non-human primates. It has been widely accepted that the orientation and the position of the thumb plays an important role in this characteristic behavior. There have been numerous attempts to develop anthropomorphic robotic hands with varying levels of success. Nevertheless, manipulation ability in those hands is to be ameliorated even though they can grasp objects successfully. An appropriate model of the thumb is important to manipulate the objects against the fingers and to maintain the stability. Modeling these complex interactions about the mechanical axes of the joints and how to incorporate these joints in robotic thumbs is a challenging task. This article presents a review of the biomechanics of the human thumb and the robotic thumb designs to identify opportunities for future anthropomorphic robotic hands

    Planning dextrous robot hand grasps from range data, using preshapes and digit trajectories

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    Dextrous robot hands have many degrees of freedom. This enables the manipulation of objects between the digits of the dextrous hand but makes grasp planning substantially more complex than for parallel jaw grippers. Much of the work that addresses grasp planning for dextrous hands concentrates on the selection of contact sites to optimise stability criteria and ignores the kinematics of the hand. In more complete systems, the paradigm of preshaping has emerged as dominant. However, the criteria for the formation and placement of the preshapes have not been adequately examined, and the usefulness of the systems is therefore limited to grasping simple objects for which preshapes can be formed using coarse heuristics.In this thesis a grasp metric based on stability and kinematic feasibility is introduced. The preshaping paradigm is extended to include consideration of the trajectories that the digits take during closure from preshape to final grasp. The resulting grasp family is dependent upon task requirements and is designed for a set of "ideal" object-hand configurations. The grasp family couples the degrees of freedom of the dextrous hand in an anthropomorphic manner; the resulting reduction in freedom makes the grasp planning less complex. Grasp families are fitted to real objects by optimisation of the grasp metric; this corresponds to fitting the real object-hand configuration as close to the ideal as possible. First, the preshape aperture, which defines the positions of the fingertips in the preshape, is found by optimisation of an approximation to the grasp metric (which makes simplifying assumptions about the digit trajectories and hand kinematics). Second, the full preshape kinematics and digit closure trajectories are calculated to optimise the full grasp metric.Grasps are planned on object models built from laser striper range data from two viewpoints. A surface description of the object is used to prune the space of possible contact sites and to allow the accurate estimation of normals, which is required by the grasp metric to estimate the amount of friction required. A voxel description, built by ray-casting, is used to check for collisions between the object and the robot hand using an approximation to the Euclidean distance transform.Results are shown in simulation for a 3-digit hand model, designed to be like a simplified human hand in terms of its size and functionality. There are clear extensions of the method to any dextrous hand with a single thumb opposing multiple fingers and several different hand models that could be used are described. Grasps are planned on a wide variety of curved and polyhedral object

    Contact Force Analysis in Static Two-fingered Robot Grasping

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    [[abstract]]Static grasping of a spherical object by two robot fingers is studied in this paper. The fingers may be rigid bodies or elastic beams, they may grasp the body with various orientation angles, and the tightening displacements may be linear or angular. Closed-form solutions for normal and tangential contact forces due to tightening displacements are obtained by solving compatibility equations, force-displacement relations based on Hertz contact theory, and equations of equilibrium. Solutions show that relations between contact forces and tightening displacements depend upon the orientation of the fingers, the elastic constants of the materials, and area moments of inertia of the beams.[[sponsorship]]American Society of Mechanical Engineers[[notice]]補正完成[[incitationindex]]EI[[conferencetype]]國際[[conferencedate]]20130804~20130807[[booktype]]電子版[[iscallforpapers]]Y[[conferencelocation]]Portland, Oregon, US

    Towards a Realistic and Self-Contained Biomechanical Model of the Hand

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    On Aerial Robots with Grasping and Perching Capabilities: A Comprehensive Review

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    Over the last decade, there has been an increased interest in developing aerial robotic platforms that exhibit grasping and perching capabilities not only within the research community but also in companies across different industry sectors. Aerial robots range from standard multicopter vehicles/drones, to autonomous helicopters, and fixed-wing or hybrid devices. Such devices rely on a range of different solutions for achieving grasping and perching. These solutions can be classified as: 1) simple gripper systems, 2) arm-gripper systems, 3) tethered gripping mechanisms, 4) reconfigurable robot frames, 5) adhesion solutions, and 6) embedment solutions. Grasping and perching are two crucial capabilities that allow aerial robots to interact with the environment and execute a plethora of complex tasks, facilitating new applications that range from autonomous package delivery and search and rescue to autonomous inspection of dangerous or remote environments. In this review paper, we present the state-of-the-art in aerial grasping and perching mechanisms and we provide a comprehensive comparison of their characteristics. Furthermore, we analyze these mechanisms by comparing the advantages and disadvantages of the proposed technologies and we summarize the significant achievements in these two research topics. Finally, we conclude the review by suggesting a series of potential future research directions that we believe that are promising
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