184 research outputs found

    Design and Control of Compliant Actuation Topologies for Energy-Efficient Articulated Robots

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    Considerable advances have been made in the field of robotic actuation in recent years. At the heart of this has been increased use of compliance. Arguably the most common approach is that of Series-Elastic Actuation (SEA), and SEAs have evolved to become the core component of many articulated robots. Another approach is integration of compliance in parallel to the main actuation, referred to as Parallel- Elastic Actuation (PEA). A wide variety of such systems has been proposed. While both approaches have demonstrated significant potential benefits, a number of key challenges remain with regards to the design and control of such actuators. This thesis addresses some of the challenges that exist in design and control of compliant actuation systems. First, it investigates the design, dynamics, and control of SEAs as the core components of next-generation robots. We consider the influence of selected physical stiffness on torque controllability and backdrivability, and propose an optimality criterion for impedance rendering. Furthermore, we consider disturbance observers for robust torque control. Simulation studies and experimental data validate the analyses. Secondly, this work investigates augmentation of articulated robots with adjustable parallel compliance and multi-articulated actuation for increased energy efficiency. Particularly, design optimisation of parallel compliance topologies with adjustable pretension is proposed, including multi-articulated arrangements. Novel control strategies are developed for such systems. To validate the proposed concepts, novel hardware is designed, simulation studies are performed, and experimental data of two platforms are provided, that show the benefits over state-of-the-art SEA-only based actuatio

    Design and Implement Towards Enhanced Physical Interactive Performance Robot Bodies

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    In this thesis, it will introduce the design principle and implement details towards enhanced physical interactive performance robot bodies, which are more specically focused on under actuated principle robotic hands and articulated leg robots. Since they both signicantly function as the physical interactive robot bodies against external environment, while their current performance can hardly satisfy the requirement of undertaking missions in real application. Regarding to the enhanced physical interactive performances, my work will emphasis on the three following specific functionalities, high energy efficiency, high strength and physical sturdiness in both robotics actuation and mechanism. For achieving the aforementioned targets, multiple design methods have been applied, rstly the elastic energy storage elements and compliant actuation have been adopted in legged robots as Asymmetrical Compliant Actuation (ACA), implemented for not only single joint but also multiple joints as mono and biarticulation congurations in order to achieve higher energy effciency motion. Secondly the under actuated principle and modular nger design concept have been utilized on the development of robotic hands for enhancing the grasping strength and physical sturdiness meanwhile maintaining the manipulation dexterity. Lastly, a novel high payload active tuning Parallel Elastic Actuation (PEA) and Series Elastic Actuation (SEA) have been adopted on legged robots for augmenting energy eciency and physical sturdiness. My thesis contribution relies on the novel design and implement of robotics bodies for enhancing physical interactive performance and we experimentally veried the design effectiveness in specic designed scenario and practical applications

    Design and Control of Lower Limb Assistive Exoskeleton for Hemiplegia Mobility

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    Mechatronic design solution for planar overconstrained cable-driven parallel robot

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    Cable-driven parallel robots (CDPRs) combine the successful features of parallel manipulators with the benefits of cable transmissions. The payload is divided among light extendable cables, resulting in an energy-efficient system that can achieve high end-effector acceleration over a huge workspace. A CDPR is formed by a set of actuation units, and a mobile platform, working as an end-effector (EE). The cables, driven by the actuation units, are guided inside the robot workspace using a guidance system and then connected to the mobile platform. The variation of cable lengths is responsible for the EE displacement throughout the robot workspace. These features result in easily reconfigurable systems where the workspace can be modified by relocating the actuation and guidance units. Nevertheless, the use of CDPRs in industrial environments is still limited, due to the drawbacks of employing flexible cables. Indeed, cables impose unilateral constraints that can only exert tensile forces and, consequently, the EE cannot withstand any arbitrary external action. To enhance the robot’s controllability, CDPRs can be overconstrained by employing a number of cables higher than the degrees of freedom of the EE. This allows cables to pull one against the other and to keep the overall system controllable over a wide range of externally applied loads. In this thesis, an eight-cable, planar, overconstrained CDPR is designed: the robot has the deployable and reconfigurable features required by the task. In particular, this CDPR has its actuation units installed into the EE mobile platform, and the frame anchor points can be rearranged to obtain a discrete reconfiguration. The cable arrangement, location of anchor points and mechanical design have been studied, by implementing a hybrid optimisation procedure. The genetic algorithm is combined with a local minimum optimiser, maximizing the CDPR volume index and deriving a mechanical design for the prototype

    Snake Robots for Surgical Applications: A Review

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    Although substantial advancements have been achieved in robot-assisted surgery, the blueprint to existing snake robotics predominantly focuses on the preliminary structural design, control, and human–robot interfaces, with features which have not been particularly explored in the literature. This paper aims to conduct a review of planning and operation concepts of hyper-redundant serpentine robots for surgical use, as well as any future challenges and solutions for better manipulation. Current researchers in the field of the manufacture and navigation of snake robots have faced issues, such as a low dexterity of the end-effectors around delicate organs, state estimation and the lack of depth perception on two-dimensional screens. A wide range of robots have been analysed, such as the i2Snake robot, inspiring the use of force and position feedback, visual servoing and augmented reality (AR). We present the types of actuation methods, robot kinematics, dynamics, sensing, and prospects of AR integration in snake robots, whilst addressing their shortcomings to facilitate the surgeon’s task. For a smoother gait control, validation and optimization algorithms such as deep learning databases are examined to mitigate redundancy in module linkage backlash and accidental self-collision. In essence, we aim to provide an outlook on robot configurations during motion by enhancing their material compositions within anatomical biocompatibility standards

    Distributed Actuation and Control for Morphing Structures

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