544 research outputs found

    Research and development at ORNL/CESAR towards cooperating robotic systems for hazardous environments

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    One of the frontiers in intelligent machine research is the understanding of how constructive cooperation among multiple autonomous agents can be effected. The effort at the Center for Engineering Systems Advanced Research (CESAR) at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) focuses on two problem areas: (1) cooperation by multiple mobile robots in dynamic, incompletely known environments; and (2) cooperating robotic manipulators. Particular emphasis is placed on experimental evaluation of research and developments using the CESAR robot system testbeds, including three mobile robots, and a seven-axis, kinematically redundant mobile manipulator. This paper summarizes initial results of research addressing the decoupling of position and force control for two manipulators holding a common object, and the path planning for multiple robots in a common workspace

    Decentralized Ability-Aware Adaptive Control for Multi-robot Collaborative Manipulation

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    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-

    Attractor dynamics approach to joint transportation by autonomous robots: theory, implementation and validation on the factory floor

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    This paper shows how non-linear attractor dynamics can be used to control teams of two autonomous mobile robots that coordinate their motion in order to transport large payloads in unknown environments, which might change over time and may include narrow passages, corners and sharp U-turns. Each robot generates its collision-free motion online as the sensed information changes. The control architecture for each robot is formalized as a non-linear dynamical system, where by design attractor states, i.e. asymptotically stable states, dominate and evolve over time. Implementation details are provided, and it is further shown that odometry or calibration errors are of no significance. Results demonstrate flexible and stable behavior in different circumstances: when the payload is of different sizes; when the layout of the environment changes from one run to another; when the environment is dynamice.g. following moving targets and avoiding moving obstacles; and when abrupt disturbances challenge team behavior during the execution of the joint transportation task.- This work was supported by FCT-Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia within the scope of the Project PEst-UID/CEC/00319/2013 and by the Ph.D. Grants SFRH/BD/38885/2007 and SFRH/BPD/71874/2010, as well as funding from FP6-IST2 EU-IP Project JAST (Proj. Nr. 003747). We would like to thank the anonymous reviewers, whose comments have contributed to improve the paper

    Handling of large and heavy objects using a single mobile manipulator in combination with a roller board

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    This paper presents a method for autonomous loading, transportation, and unloading of large objects using a nonholonomic mobile manipulator. Here, the size of the transported object is considerably larger than the size of the mobile platform, which is made possible through the use of a roller board. In this way, the mobile manipulator can handle objects that exceed the manipulator's payload. The robot can load and unload the object onto its platform using the differential kinematics of the system for a null space motion to maintain the object's position in space. In order to localise the object, we apply 3D-perception using a depth-camera. While transporting the object to its destination, the robot is considered a tractor-trailer-wheeled system and can navigate using SLAM. Kinematic modelling and practical evaluation prove that the system can potentially take over arduous transportation tasks
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