9,035 research outputs found

    Design, modelling and control of a brachiating power line inspection robot

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    The inspection of power lines and associated hardware is vital to ensuring the reliability of the transmission and distribution network. The repetitive nature of the inspection tasks present a unique opportunity for the introduction of robotic platforms, which offer the ability to perform more systematic and detailed inspection than traditional methods. This lends itself to improved asset management automation, cost-effectiveness and safety for the operating crew. This dissertation presents the development of a prototype industrial brachiating robot. The robot is mechanically simple and capable of dynamically negotiating obstacles by brachiating. This is an improvement over current robotic platforms, which employ slow, high power static schemes for obstacle negotiation. Mathematical models of the robot were derived to understand the underlying dynamics of the system. These models were then used in the generation of optimal trajectories, using nonlinear optimisation techniques, for brachiating past line hardware. A physical robot was designed and manufactured to validate the brachiation manoeuvre. The robot was designed following classic mechanical design principles, with emphasis on functional design and robustness. System identification was used to capture the plant uncertainty and a feedback controller was designed to track the reference trajectory allowing for energy optimal brachiation swings. Finally, the robot was tested, starting with sub-system testing and ending with testing of a brachiation manoeuvre proving the prospective viability of the robot in an industrial environment

    Kinematic and dynamic modeling of a robotic head with linear motors

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    Our present research focuses on kinematic and dynamic modeling of a 3-DOF robotic cutting head for the next generation of CNC machines. The robotic cutting head is one kind of parallel manipulator of 3-PUU type, which has a high flexibility of motion in three-dimensional space. The parallel manipulator consists of three linear servomotors, which drive three connecting rods independently according to the cutting strategy. Being a parallel manipulator, the robotic cutting head has higher stiffness and position accuracy; consequently, higher velocities and accelerations can be achieved. A very suitable application of this mechanism is as a cutting head of a precision machine tool for three-dimensional cutting problems.<br /

    Prototyping environment for robot manipulators

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    Journal ArticlePrototyping is an important activity in engineering. Prototype development is a good test for checking the viability of a proposed system. Prototypes can also help in determining system parameters, ranges, or in designing better systems. We are proposing a prototyping environment for electro-mechanical systems, and we chosen a 3-link robot manipulator as an example. In Designing a robot manipulator, the interaction between several modules (S/W, VLSI, CAD, CAM, Robotics, and Control) illustrates an interdisciplinary prototyping environment that includes different types of information that are radically different but combined in a coordinated way. This environment will enable optimal and flexible design using reconfigurable links, joints, actuators, and sensors. Such an environment should have the right "mix" of software and hardware components for designing the physical parts and the controllers, and for the algorithmic control for the robot modules (kinematics, inverse kinematics, dynamics, trajectory planning, analog control and computer (digital) control). Specifying object-based communications and catalog mechanisms between the software modules, controllers, physical parts, CAD designs, and actuator and sensor components is a necessary step in the prototyping activities. In this report a framework for flexible prototyping environment for robot manipulators is proposed along with the required sub-systems and interfaces between the different components of this environment

    Development of methods, algorithms and software for optimal design of switched reluctance drives

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    The aim of this thesis is to estimate the perspectives of integrated switched reluctance drives (I-SRDs), i.e. reluctance machines integrated with converters. It is assumed that such drive series can be manufactured in the power range of 0.75...7.5 kW and speed ranges of 300...3000 rpm and 600...6000 rpm for applications like pumps, fans, conveyors, compressors, extruders and mixers. Based on the performed research and design work it is stated that the new drives have to be developed according to their applications, which determine objective functions and constraints, and that the best possible design should be found as a solution of a synthesis task. Sizing equations are not applied at all. The approach used in the thesis is based on the virtual prototyping concept, i.e. the new I-SRD series is designed in a virtual environment. Therefore, mathematical models and the ways to verify them have to be elaborated. The concepts of multidisciplinary and multilevel modeling are applied. The multidisciplinary model is a combination of interconnected electromagnetic, thermal and noise models. The multilevel concept is the approach when different elements of the drive are described using different languages, i.e. on different levels. Several original solutions are introduced, like the electromagnetic model comprising SIMULINK block-diagrams and MATLAB script, expressions for the correction of the flux linkage due to end-effects, an original equivalent circuit for thermal analysis, which allows using a very simple and fast method to solve the circuit, together with the concept of a multi-layer equivalent cylinder for modeling the motor winding. For verification of the multidisciplinary model a database of test results has been collected using both testing of several reluctance machines in the laboratory and analyzing of test results published by other researchers. After verification the model can be considered as a virtual prototype and can be used in the synthesis process. Several methods of solving the synthesis task were tested. The method, proved to be best suited for solving this task in the proposed form, is the genetic algorithm in the vector form with alphabetic encoding. The genetic algorithm should be coupled with the experimental design method or with the Monte-Carlo method

    Parallel Manipulators

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    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

    A finger mechanism for adaptive end effectors

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    This paper presents design and analysis of a rigid link finger, which may be suitable for a number of adaptive end effectors. The design has evolved from an industrial need for a tele-operated system to be used in nuclear environments. The end effector is designed to assist repair work in nuclear reactors during retrieval operation, particularly for the purpose of grasping objects of various shape, size and mass. The work is based on the University of Southampton's Whole Arm Manipulator, which has a special design consideration for safety and flexibility. The paper discusses kinematic issues associated with the finger design, and to the end of the paper specifies the limits of finger operating parameters for implementing control law

    Mechanics of motility initiation and motility arrest in crawling cells

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    Motility initiation in crawling cells requires transformation of a symmetric state into a polarized state. In contrast, motility arrest is associated with re-symmetrization of the internal configuration of a cell. Experiments on keratocytes suggest that polarization is triggered by the increased contractility of motor proteins but the conditions of re-symmetrization remain unknown. In this paper we show that if adhesion with the extra-cellular substrate is sufficiently low, the progressive intensification of motor-induced contraction may be responsible for both transitions: from static (symmetric) to motile (polarized) at a lower contractility threshold and from motile (polarized) back to static (symmetric) at a higher contractility threshold. Our model of lamellipodial cell motility is based on a 1D projection of the complex intra-cellular dynamics on the direction of locomotion. In the interest of analytical transparency we also neglect active protrusion and view adhesion as passive. Despite the unavoidable oversimplifications associated with these assumptions, the model reproduces quantitatively the motility initiation pattern in fish keratocytes and reveals a crucial role played in cell motility by the nonlocal feedback between the mechanics and the transport of active agents. A prediction of the model that a crawling cell can stop and re-symmetrize when contractility increases sufficiently far beyond the motility initiation threshold still awaits experimental verification

    Advanced Strategies for Robot Manipulators

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    Amongst the robotic systems, robot manipulators have proven themselves to be of increasing importance and are widely adopted to substitute for human in repetitive and/or hazardous tasks. Modern manipulators are designed complicatedly and need to do more precise, crucial and critical tasks. So, the simple traditional control methods cannot be efficient, and advanced control strategies with considering special constraints are needed to establish. In spite of the fact that groundbreaking researches have been carried out in this realm until now, there are still many novel aspects which have to be explored
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