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Multiobjective control of a four-link flexible manipulator: A robust H∞ approach
Copyright [2002] IEEE. This material is posted here with permission of the IEEE. Such permission of the IEEE does not in any way imply IEEE endorsement of any of Brunel University's products or services. Internal or personal use of this material is permitted. However, permission to reprint/republish this material for advertising or promotional purposes or for creating new collective works for resale or redistribution must be obtained from the IEEE by writing to [email protected]. By choosing to view this document, you agree to all provisions of the copyright laws protecting it.This paper presents an approach to robust H∞ control of a real multilink flexible manipulator via regional pole assignment. We first show that the manipulator system can be approximated by a linear continuous uncertain model with exogenous disturbance input. The uncertainty occurring in an operating space is assumed to be norm-bounded and enter into both the system and control matrices. Then, a multiobjective simultaneous realization problem is studied. The purpose of this problem is to design a state feedback controller such that, for all admissible parameter uncertainties, the closed-loop system simultaneously satisfies both the prespecified H∞ norm constraint on the transfer function from the disturbance input to the system output and the prespecified circular pole constraint on the closed-loop system matrix. An algebraic parameterized approach is developed to characterize the existence conditions as well as the analytical expression of the desired controllers. Third, by comparing with the traditional linear quadratic regulator control method in the sense of robustness and tracking precision, we provide both the simulation and experimental results to demonstrate the effectiveness and advantages of the proposed approach
Dynamic modeling, property investigation, and adaptive controller design of serial robotic manipulators modeled with structural compliance
Research results on general serial robotic manipulators modeled with structural compliances are presented. Two compliant manipulator modeling approaches, distributed and lumped parameter models, are used in this study. System dynamic equations for both compliant models are derived by using the first and second order influence coefficients. Also, the properties of compliant manipulator system dynamics are investigated. One of the properties, which is defined as inaccessibility of vibratory modes, is shown to display a distinct character associated with compliant manipulators. This property indicates the impact of robot geometry on the control of structural oscillations. Example studies are provided to illustrate the physical interpretation of inaccessibility of vibratory modes. Two types of controllers are designed for compliant manipulators modeled by either lumped or distributed parameter techniques. In order to maintain the generality of the results, neither linearization is introduced. Example simulations are given to demonstrate the controller performance. The second type controller is also built for general serial robot arms and is adaptive in nature which can estimate uncertain payload parameters on-line and simultaneously maintain trajectory tracking properties. The relation between manipulator motion tracking capability and convergence of parameter estimation properties is discussed through example case studies. The effect of control input update delays on adaptive controller performance is also studied
An intelligent, free-flying robot
The ground based demonstration of the extensive extravehicular activity (EVA) Retriever, a voice-supervised, intelligent, free flying robot, is designed to evaluate the capability to retrieve objects (astronauts, equipment, and tools) which have accidentally separated from the Space Station. The major objective of the EVA Retriever Project is to design, develop, and evaluate an integrated robotic hardware and on-board software system which autonomously: (1) performs system activation and check-out; (2) searches for and acquires the target; (3) plans and executes a rendezvous while continuously tracking the target; (4) avoids stationary and moving obstacles; (5) reaches for and grapples the target; (6) returns to transfer the object; and (7) returns to base
A family of asymptotically stable control laws for flexible robots based on a passivity approach
A general family of asymptotically stabilizing control laws is introduced for a class of nonlinear Hamiltonian systems. The inherent passivity property of this class of systems and the Passivity Theorem are used to show the closed-loop input/output stability which is then related to the internal state space stability through the stabilizability and detectability condition. Applications of these results include fully actuated robots, flexible joint robots, and robots with link flexibility
Machine Learning Meets Advanced Robotic Manipulation
Automated industries lead to high quality production, lower manufacturing
cost and better utilization of human resources. Robotic manipulator arms have
major role in the automation process. However, for complex manipulation tasks,
hard coding efficient and safe trajectories is challenging and time consuming.
Machine learning methods have the potential to learn such controllers based on
expert demonstrations. Despite promising advances, better approaches must be
developed to improve safety, reliability, and efficiency of ML methods in both
training and deployment phases. This survey aims to review cutting edge
technologies and recent trends on ML methods applied to real-world manipulation
tasks. After reviewing the related background on ML, the rest of the paper is
devoted to ML applications in different domains such as industry, healthcare,
agriculture, space, military, and search and rescue. The paper is closed with
important research directions for future works
Design and Implementation of a Robot Force and Motion Server
A robot manipulator is a force and motion server for a robot. The robot, interpreting sensor information in terms of a world model and a task plan, issues instructions to the manipulator to carry out tasks.
The control of a manipulator first involves motion trajectory generation needed when the manipulator is instructed to move to desired positions. The procedure of generating the trajectory must be flexible and efficient. When the manipulator comes into contact with the environment such as during assembly, it must be able to comply with the geometric constraints presented by the contact in order to perform tasks successfully. The control strategies for motion and compliance are executed in real time by the control computer, which must be powerful enough to carry out the necessary computations.
This thesis first presents an efficient method for manipulator motion planning. Two fundamental modes of motion, Cartesian and joint, are considered and transition between motion segments is uniformly treated to obtain an efficient and simple system. A modified hybrid control method for manipulator compliance is then proposed and implemented. The method overcomes the problems existing in previous approaches such as stiffness control and hybrid control. Finally, a controller architecture is studied to distribute computations into a number of processors to satisfy the computational requirement in a cost-effective manner. The implementation using Intel\u27s single board computers is also discussed. Finally, to demonstrate the system, the motion trajectory. and the modified forced/motion control scheme are implemented on the controller and a PUMA 260 manipulator controlled from a multi-user VAX/Unix system through an Ethernet interface
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