697 research outputs found
A Hybrid Adaptive Controller for Soft Robot Interchangeability
Soft robots have been leveraged in considerable areas like surgery,
rehabilitation, and bionics due to their softness, flexibility, and safety.
However, it is challenging to produce two same soft robots even with the same
mold and manufacturing process owing to the complexity of soft materials.
Meanwhile, widespread usage of a system requires the ability to fabricate
replaceable components, which is interchangeability. Due to the necessity of
this property, a hybrid adaptive controller is introduced to achieve
interchangeability from the perspective of control approaches. This method
utilizes an offline trained recurrent neural network controller to cope with
the nonlinear and delayed response from soft robots. Furthermore, an online
optimizing kinematics controller is applied to decrease the error caused by the
above neural network controller. Soft pneumatic robots with different
deformation properties but the same mold have been included for validation
experiments. In the experiments, the systems with different actuation
configurations and the different robots follow the desired trajectory with
errors of 0.040 and 0.030 compared with the working space length, respectively.
Such an adaptive controller also shows good performance on different control
frequencies and desired velocities. This controller endows soft robots with the
potential for wide application, and future work may include different offline
and online controllers. A weight parameter adjusting strategy may also be
proposed in the future.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, 4 table
Decentralized adaptive partitioned approximation control of high degrees-of-freedom robotic manipulators considering three actuator control modes
International audiencePartitioned approximation control is avoided in most decentralized control algorithms; however, it is essential to design a feedforward control term for improving the tracking accuracy of the desired references. In addition, consideration of actuator dynamics is important for a robot with high-velocity movement and highly varying loads. As a result, this work is focused on decentralized adaptive partitioned approximation control for complex robotic systems using the orthogonal basis functions as strong approximators. In essence, the partitioned approximation technique is intrinsically decentralized with some modifications. Three actuator control modes are considered in this study: (i) a torque control mode in which the armature current is well controlled by a current servo amplifier and the motor torque/current constant is known, (ii) a current control mode in which the torque/current constant is unknown, and (iii) a voltage control mode with no current servo control being available. The proposed decentralized control law consists of three terms: the partitioned approximation-based feedforward term that is necessary for precise tracking, the high gain-based feedback term, and the adaptive sliding gain-based term for compensation of modeling error. The passivity property is essential to prove the stability of local stability of the individual subsystem with guaranteed global stability. Two case studies are used to prove the validity of the proposed controller: a two-link manipulator and a six-link biped robot
Industrial Robotics
This book covers a wide range of topics relating to advanced industrial robotics, sensors and automation technologies. Although being highly technical and complex in nature, the papers presented in this book represent some of the latest cutting edge technologies and advancements in industrial robotics technology. This book covers topics such as networking, properties of manipulators, forward and inverse robot arm kinematics, motion path-planning, machine vision and many other practical topics too numerous to list here. The authors and editor of this book wish to inspire people, especially young ones, to get involved with robotic and mechatronic engineering technology and to develop new and exciting practical applications, perhaps using the ideas and concepts presented herein
Comprehensive review on controller for leader-follower robotic system
985-1007This paper presents a comprehensive review of the leader-follower robotics system. The aim of this paper is to find and elaborate on the current trends in the swarm robotic system, leader-follower, and multi-agent system. Another part of this review will focus on finding the trend of controller utilized by previous researchers in the leader-follower system. The controller that is commonly applied by the researchers is mostly adaptive and non-linear controllers. The paper also explores the subject of study or system used during the research which normally employs multi-robot, multi-agent, space flying, reconfigurable system, multi-legs system or unmanned system. Another aspect of this paper concentrates on the topology employed by the researchers when they conducted simulation or experimental studies
Adaptive Sliding Mode Control of Mobile Manipulators with Markovian Switching Joints
The hybrid joints of manipulators can be switched to either active (actuated) or passive (underactuated) mode as needed. Consider the property of hybrid joints, the system switches stochastically between active and passive systems, and the dynamics of the jump system cannot stay on each trajectory errors region of subsystems forever; therefore, it is difficult to determine whether the closed-loop system is stochastically stable. In this paper, we consider stochastic stability and sliding mode control for mobile manipulators using stochastic jumps switching joints. Adaptive parameter techniques are adopted to cope with the effect of Markovian switching and nonlinear dynamics uncertainty and follow the desired trajectory for wheeled mobile manipulators. The resulting closed-loop system is bounded in probability and the effect due to the external disturbance on the tracking errors can be attenuated to any preassigned level. It has been shown that the adaptive control problem for the Markovian jump nonlinear systems is solvable if a set of coupled linear matrix inequalities (LMIs) have solutions. Finally, a numerical example is given to show the potential of the proposed techniques
基于RBF神经网络补偿的一种绳牵引并联机器人支撑系统的力/位混合控制
为了保证用于风洞试验的绳牵引并联机器人支撑系统(Wire-Driven Parallel Robot Support System WDPRSS)的末端执行精度,设计了一种采用Hamilton-Jacobi Inequality(HJI)定理并基于RBF神经网络补偿的力/位混合控制。通过对WDPRSS的动力学建模分析,选择以位姿作为变量建立WDPRSS的整体动力学方程。将所设计的力/位混合控制代入到整体动力学方程中得误差闭环系统,对闭环系统进行稳定性分析,结果证明WDPRSS是趋于渐进稳定特性的。对八绳牵引的并联机器人支撑系统进行MATLAB/SIMULINK仿真实验,仿真结果表明所设计的力/位混合控制是正确有效的,满足控制精度要求,并将所设计的力/位混合控制与PD控制进行对比分析。最后,通过样机实验验证了所提控制方案的有效性。仿真实验和样机实验为在样机上进行技术实现提供了理论依据和实验基础
Parallel Manipulators
In recent years, parallel kinematics mechanisms have attracted a lot of attention from the academic and industrial communities due to potential applications not only as robot manipulators but also as machine tools. Generally, the criteria used to compare the performance of traditional serial robots and parallel robots are the workspace, the ratio between the payload and the robot mass, accuracy, and dynamic behaviour. In addition to the reduced coupling effect between joints, parallel robots bring the benefits of much higher payload-robot mass ratios, superior accuracy and greater stiffness; qualities which lead to better dynamic performance. The main drawback with parallel robots is the relatively small workspace. A great deal of research on parallel robots has been carried out worldwide, and a large number of parallel mechanism systems have been built for various applications, such as remote handling, machine tools, medical robots, simulators, micro-robots, and humanoid robots. This book opens a window to exceptional research and development work on parallel mechanisms contributed by authors from around the world. Through this window the reader can get a good view of current parallel robot research and applications
Optimal Control of Legged-Robots Subject to Friction Cone Constraints
A hierarchical control architecture is presented for energy-efficient control
of legged robots subject to variety of linear/nonlinear inequality constraints
such as Coulomb friction cones, switching unilateral contacts, actuator
saturation limits, and yet minimizing the power losses in the joint actuators.
The control formulation can incorporate the nonlinear friction cone constraints
into the control without recourse to the common linear approximation of the
constraints or introduction of slack variables. A performance metric is
introduced that allows trading-off the multiple constraints when otherwise
finding an optimal solution is not feasible. Moreover, the projection-based
controller does not require the minimal-order dynamics model and hence allows
switching contacts that is particularly appealing for legged robots. The
fundamental properties of constrained inertia matrix derived are similar to
those of general inertia matrix of the system and subsequently these properties
are greatly exploited for control design purposes. The problem of task space
control with minimum (point-wise) power dissipation subject to all physical
constraints is transcribed into a quadratically constrained quadratic
programming (QCQP) that can be solved by barrier methods
- …