232 research outputs found
Manipulator Performance Measures - A Comprehensive Literature Survey
Due to copyright restrictions of the publisher this item is embargoed and access to the file is restricted until a year after the publishing date.The final publication is available at www.springerlink.comPerformance measures are quintessential to the design, synthesis, study and
application of robotic manipulators. Numerous performance measures have been
defined to study the performance and behavior of manipulators since the early days of
robotics; some more widely accepted than others, but their real significance and
limitations have not always been well understood. The aim of this survey is to review
the definition, classification, scope, and limitations of some of the widely used
performance measures. This work provides an extensive bibliography that can be of
help to researchers interested in studying and evaluating the performance and
behavior of robotic manipulators. Finally, a few recommendations are proposed based
on the review so that the most commonly noticed limitations can be avoided when new
performance measures are proposed.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10846-014-0024-y
Geometry-aware Manipulability Learning, Tracking and Transfer
Body posture influences human and robots performance in manipulation tasks,
as appropriate poses facilitate motion or force exertion along different axes.
In robotics, manipulability ellipsoids arise as a powerful descriptor to
analyze, control and design the robot dexterity as a function of the
articulatory joint configuration. This descriptor can be designed according to
different task requirements, such as tracking a desired position or apply a
specific force. In this context, this paper presents a novel
\emph{manipulability transfer} framework, a method that allows robots to learn
and reproduce manipulability ellipsoids from expert demonstrations. The
proposed learning scheme is built on a tensor-based formulation of a Gaussian
mixture model that takes into account that manipulability ellipsoids lie on the
manifold of symmetric positive definite matrices. Learning is coupled with a
geometry-aware tracking controller allowing robots to follow a desired profile
of manipulability ellipsoids. Extensive evaluations in simulation with
redundant manipulators, a robotic hand and humanoids agents, as well as an
experiment with two real dual-arm systems validate the feasibility of the
approach.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Intl. Journal of Robotics Research
(IJRR). Website: https://sites.google.com/view/manipulability. Code:
https://github.com/NoemieJaquier/Manipulability. 24 pages, 20 figures, 3
tables, 4 appendice
Faster Motion on Cartesian Paths Exploiting Robot Redundancy at the Acceleration Level
The problem of minimizing the transfer time along a given Cartesian path for redundant robots can be approached in two steps, by separating the generation of a joint path associated to the Cartesian path from the exact minimization of motion time under kinematic/dynamic bounds along the obtained parameterized joint path. In this framework, multiple suboptimal solutions can be found, depending on how redundancy is locally resolved in the joint space within the first step. We propose a solution method that works at the acceleration level, by using weighted pseudoinversion, optimizing an inertia-related criterion, and including null-space damping. Several numerical results obtained on different robot systems demonstrate consistently good behaviors and definitely faster motion times in comparison with related methods proposed in the literature. The motion time obtained with our method is reasonably close to the global time-optimal solution along same Cartesian path. Experimental results on a KUKA LWR IV are also reported, showing the tracking control performance on the executed motions
Self-motion control of kinematically redundant robot manipulators
Thesis (Master)--Izmir Institute of Technology, Mechanical Engineering, Izmir, 2012Includes bibliographical references (leaves: 88-92)Text in English; Abstract: Turkish and Englishxvi,92 leavesRedundancy in general provides space for optimization in robotics. Redundancy can be defined as sensor/actuator redundancy or kinematic redundancy. The redundancy considered in this thesis is the kinematic redundancy where the total degrees-of-freedom of the robot is more than the total degrees-of-freedom required for the task to be executed. This provides infinite number of solutions to perform the same task, thus, various subtasks can be carried out during the main-task execution. This work utilizes the property of self-motion for kinematically redundant robot manipulators by designing the general subtask controller that controls the joint motion in the null-space of the Jacobian matrix. The general subtask controller is implemented for various subtasks in this thesis. Minimizing the total joint motion, singularity avoidance, posture optimization for static impact force objectives, which include maximizing/minimizing the static impact force magnitude, and static and moving obstacle (point to point) collision avoidance are the subtasks considered in this thesis. New control architecture is developed to accomplish both the main-task and the previously mentioned subtasks. In this architecture, objective function for each subtask is formed. Then, the gradient of the objective function is used in the subtask controller to execute subtask objective while tracking a given end-effector trajectory. The tracking of the end-effector is called main-task. The SCHUNK LWA4-Arm robot arm with seven degrees-of-freedom is developed first in SolidWorks® as a computer-aided-design (CAD) model. Then, the CAD model is converted to MATLAB® Simulink model using SimMechanics CAD translator to be used in the simulation tests of the controller. Kinematics and dynamics equations of the robot are derived to be used in the controllers. Simulation test results are presented for the kinematically redundant robot manipulator operating in 3D space carrying out the main-task and the selected subtasks for this study. The simulation test results indicate that the developed controller’s performance is successful for all the main-task and subtask objectives
Decentralized Ability-Aware Adaptive Control for Multi-robot Collaborative Manipulation
Multi-robot teams can achieve more dexterous, complex and heavier payload
tasks than a single robot, yet effective collaboration is required. Multi-robot
collaboration is extremely challenging due to the different kinematic and
dynamics capabilities of the robots, the limited communication between them,
and the uncertainty of the system parameters. In this paper, a Decentralized
Ability-Aware Adaptive Control is proposed to address these challenges based on
two key features. Firstly, the common manipulation task is represented by the
proposed nominal task ellipsoid, which is used to maximize each robot force
capability online via optimizing its configuration. Secondly, a decentralized
adaptive controller is designed to be Lyapunov stable in spite of heterogeneous
actuation constraints of the robots and uncertain physical parameters of the
object and environment. In the proposed framework, decentralized coordination
and load distribution between the robots is achieved without communication,
while only the control deficiency is broadcast if any of the robots reaches its
force limits. In this case, the object reference trajectory is modified in a
decentralized manner to guarantee stable interaction. Finally, we perform
several numerical and physical simulations to analyse and verify the proposed
method with heterogeneous multi-robot teams in collaborative manipulation
tasks.Comment: The article has been submitted to IEEE Robotics and Automation
Letters (RA-L) with ICRA 2021 conference option; the article has been
accepted for publication in RA-
Control strategy for cooperating disparate manipulators
To manipulate large payloads typical of space construction, the concept of a small arm mounted on the end of a large arm is introduced. The main purposes of such a configuration are to increase the structural stiffness of the robot by bracing against or locking to a stationary frame, and to maintain a firm position constraint between the robot's base and workpieces by grasping them. Possible topologies for a combination of disparate large and small arms are discussed, and kinematics, dynamics, controls, and coordination of the two arms, especially when they brace at the tip of the small arm, are developed. The feasibility and improvement in performance are verified, not only with analytical work and simulation results but also with experiments on the existing arrangement Robotic Arm Large and Flexible and Small Articulated Manipulator
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