458 research outputs found
Robot Impedance Control and Passivity Analysis with Inner Torque and Velocity Feedback Loops
Impedance control is a well-established technique to control interaction
forces in robotics. However, real implementations of impedance control with an
inner loop may suffer from several limitations. Although common practice in
designing nested control systems is to maximize the bandwidth of the inner loop
to improve tracking performance, it may not be the most suitable approach when
a certain range of impedance parameters has to be rendered. In particular, it
turns out that the viable range of stable stiffness and damping values can be
strongly affected by the bandwidth of the inner control loops (e.g. a torque
loop) as well as by the filtering and sampling frequency. This paper provides
an extensive analysis on how these aspects influence the stability region of
impedance parameters as well as the passivity of the system. This will be
supported by both simulations and experimental data. Moreover, a methodology
for designing joint impedance controllers based on an inner torque loop and a
positive velocity feedback loop will be presented. The goal of the velocity
feedback is to increase (given the constraints to preserve stability) the
bandwidth of the torque loop without the need of a complex controller.Comment: 14 pages in Control Theory and Technology (2016
Momentum Control of Humanoid Robots with Series Elastic Actuators
Humanoid robots may require a degree of compliance at the joint level for
improving efficiency, shock tolerance, and safe interaction with humans. The
presence of joint elasticity, however, complexifies the design of balancing and
walking controllers. This paper proposes a control framework for extending
momentum based controllers developed for stiff actuators to the case of series
elastic actuators. The key point is to consider the motor velocities as an
intermediate control input, and then apply high-gain control to stabilise the
desired motor velocities achieving momentum control. Simulations carried out on
a model of the robot iCub verify the soundness of the proposed approach
Measuring inefficiency in the rubber manufacturing industry
Malaysia is the fifth largest producer of natural rubber in the world after Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam and China as well as producing rubber products exported to more than 190 countries worldwide. However, the slowdown in growth of major importers such as China, the European Union and the United States and the perception of stock surplus as output exceeds demand led to fluctuating rubber production performance over the period 2010 to 2016. Hence, this article aims at examining the level of technical efficiency (TE) and to analyze the determinants of the inefficiencies of the rubber manufacturing industry. The analysis was conducted using the latest 145 firms’ data obtained from the Department of Statistics Malaysia (DOS) and using the Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA) method. The results showed that the overall TE level was high while the determinants such as the capital-labor ratio, wage rate and firm size had a negative and significant impact that could reduce industrial technical efficiencies. The policy implication is that the rubber manufacturing industry needs to focus on high technological production investment, increase employee motivation through wage increment and create more strategic cooperation with international industry
Evaluation and Comparison of SEA Torque Controllers in a Unified Framework
Series elastic actuators (SEA) with their inherent compliance offer a safe
torque source for robots that are interacting with various environments,
including humans. These applications have high requirements for the SEA torque
controllers, both in the torque response as well as interaction behavior with
its the environment. To differentiate state of the art torque controllers, this
work is introducing a unifying theoretical and experimental framework that
compares controllers based on their torque transfer behavior, their apparent
impedance behavior, and especially the passivity of the apparent impedance,
i.e. their interaction stability, as well as their sensitivity to sensor noise.
We compare classical SEA control approaches such as cascaded PID controllers
and full state feedback controllers with advanced controllers using disturbance
observers, acceleration feedback and adaptation rules. Simulations and
experiments demonstrate the trade-off between stable interactions, high
bandwidths and low noise levels. Based on these tradeoffs, an application
specific controller can be designed and tuned, based on desired interaction
with the respective environment
Cartesian impedance control of redundant manipulators for human-robot co-manipulation
This paper addresses the problem of controlling a robot arm executing a cooperative task with a human who guides the robot through direct physical interaction. This problem is tackled by allowing the end effector to comply according to an impedance control law defined in the Cartesian space. While, in principle, the robot's dynamics can be fully compensated and any impedance behaviour can be imposed by the control, the stability of the coupled human-robot system is not guaranteed for any value of the impedance parameters. Moreover, if the robot is kinematically or functionally redundant, the redundant degrees of freedom play an important role. The idea proposed here is to use redundancy to ensure a decoupled apparent inertia at the end effector. Through an extensive experimental study on a 7-DOF KUKA LWR4 arm, we show that inertial decoupling enables a more flexible choice of the impedance parameters and improves the performance during manual guidance
Impedence Control for Variable Stiffness Mechanisms with Nonlinear Joint Coupling
The current discussion on physical human robot
interaction and the related safety aspects, but also the interest
of neuro-scientists to validate their hypotheses on human motor
skills with bio-mimetic robots, led to a recent revival of tendondriven
robots. In this paper, the modeling of tendon-driven
elastic systems with nonlinear couplings is recapitulated. A
control law is developed that takes the desired joint position
and stiffness as input. Therefore, desired motor positions are
determined that are commanded to an impedance controller.
We give a physical interpretation of the controller. More importantly,
a static decoupling of the joint motion and the stiffness
variation is given. The combination of active (controller) and
passive (mechanical) stiffness is investigated. The controller
stiffness is designed according to the desired overall stiffness.
A damping design of the impedance controller is included in
these considerations. The controller performance is evaluated
in simulation
Practice of law in the provisioning of accessibility facilities for person with disabilities in Malaysia
Malaysia’s significant changes can be seen clearly through the improvement of social welfare of the disabled and people with disabilities. Although the governments has carried out various policies and provide facilities as well as provision for the disabled but there are still many obstacles encountered by people with disabilities, especially the legal and the accessibility of facilities and services. Therefore, this paper attempts to discuss the practice of law relating of legal procedure particularly for disabled users which affects the movement of these people from one destination to another. This paper discusses the practice of law adopted in the preparation of facilities for disabled people to help them make movement independently. The study was conducted by secondary data to the Malaysia legal and policies for disabled person by comparing with United Kingdom (UK). Malaysia has come out with a strong legal framework for disabled person through People with Disabilities Act 2008 (Act 685). There are several areas in the act that still can be improved to support disabled person
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