416 research outputs found

    Pjezorobotų trajektorijų valdymas nanopalydovų stabilizavimui

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    Rapid industrial advancement requires novel ideas, new scientific approaches and effective technologies that would ensure quality and precision. Application of piezoelectric actuators in robotics opens many possibilities to create systems with extreme precision and control. A very important step in the development of autonomous robots is the formation of motion trajectories. Classical interpolation methods used for formation of the trajectories are suitable only when robots have wheels, legs or other parts for motion transmission. Piezorobots that are analyzed in this dissertation have no additional components that create motion, only contact points with the static plane. Therefore, traditional motion formation methods are not suitable and a problem arises how to define motion trajectory of such device. The aim of this work is to create a trajectory control algorithm of multi-degrees-of-freedom piezorobot used for nanosatellite stabilization. In order to achieve the objective, the following tasks had to be solved: to analyze constructions of precise piezorobots, their operating principles and motion formation methods; to analyze stabilization problems of satellites and application of multi-degrees-of-freedom piezorobots for nanosatellite stabilization; to create piezorobots’ motion formation algorithms according to electrode excitation schemes, to perform an experimental research; to determine quantitative characteristics of the constructed piezorobots and their motion trajectories. The introduction describes the importance and novelty of this thesis, goals of this work, its practical value and defended statements. The first chapter analyses the principals of ultrasonic devices, gives a thorough review of constructions of ultrasonic devices with multi-degrees-of-freedom. The second chapter provides a review of satellite stabilization principles and how multi-degrees-of-freedom piezorobots can be applied for nanosatellite stabilization. Motion formation methods for ultrasonic devices with multi-degrees-of-freedom are presented. The third chapter presents the detailed analysis of different piezorobots. In the fourth chapter experimental results are provided. Trajectory planning of piezorobot is shown, results are compared to numerical calculations performed in the third chapter. The conclusions about applicability of piezorobots’ motion formation algorithms according to electrode excitation schemes are given. Seven articles focusing on the subject of the dissertation have been published, two presentations on the subject have been presented in conferences at international level. The research for the dissertation has been funded by the Lithuanian State Science and Studies Foundation: European Regional Development Fund, Project No. DOTSUT-234 and Research Council of Lithuania, Project No. MIP-084/2015.Dissertatio

    The Roles of Piezoelectric Ultrasonic Motors in Industry 4.0 Era: Opportunities & Challenges

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    Piezoelectric Ultrasonic motors (USM) are based on the principle of converse piezoelectric effect i.e., vibrations occur when an electrical field is applied to piezoelectric materials. USMs have been studied several decades for their advantages over traditional electromagnetic motors. Despite having many advantages, they have several challenges too. Recently many researchers have started focusing on Industry 4.0 or Fourth Industrial revolution phase of the industry which mostly emphasis on digitization & interconnection of the entities throughout the life cycle of the product in an industrial network to get the best possible output. Industry 4.0 utilizes various advanced tools for carrying out the nexus between the entities & bringing up them on digital platform. The studies of the role of USMs in Industry 4.0 scenario has never been done till now & this article fills that gap by analyzing the piezoelectric ultrasonic motors in depth & breadth in the background of Industry 4.0. This article delivers the novel working principle, illustrates examples for effective utilization of USMs, so that it can buttress the growth of Industry 4.0 Era & on the other hand it also analyses the key Industry 4.0 enabling technologies to improve the performance of the USMs

    An inverse Prandtl–Ishlinskii model based decoupling control methodology for a 3-DOF flexure-based mechanism

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    A modified Prandtl–Ishlinskii (P–I) hysteresis model is developed to form the feedforward controller for a 3-DOF flexure-based mechanism. To improve the control accuracy of the P–I hysteresis model, a hybrid structure that includes backlash operators, dead-zone operators and a cubic polynomial function is proposed. Both the rate-dependent hysteresis modeling and adaptive dead-zone thresholds selection method are investigated. System identification was used to obtain the parameters of the newly-developed hysteresis model. Closed-loop control was added to reduce the influence from external disturbances such as vibration and noise, leading to a combined feedforward/feedback control strategy. The cross-axis coupling motion of the 3-DOF flexure-based mechanism has been explored using the established controller. Accordingly, a decoupling feedforward/feedback controller is proposed and implemented to compensate the coupled motion of the moving platform. Experimental tests are reported to examine the tracking capability of the whole system and features of the controller. It is demonstrated that the proposed decoupling control methodology can distinctly reduce the coupling motion of the moving platform and thus improve the positioning accuracy and trajectory tracking capability

    Task Specific Humanoid Hand Design using Single Crystal Ultrasonic Motors

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    Master'sMASTER OF ENGINEERIN

    Design, Fabrication, and Characterization of a 2-D SOI MEMS Micromirror with Sidewall Electrodes for Confocal MACROscope Imaging

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    Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) micromirrors have been developed for more than two decades along with the development of MEMS technology. They have been used into many application fields: optical switches, digital light projector (DLP), adoptive optics (AO), high definition (HD) display, barcode reader, endoscopic optical coherence tomography (OCT) and confocal microscope, and so on. Especially, MEMS mirrors applied into endoscopic OCT and confocal microscope are the intensive research field. Various actuation mechanisms, such as electrostatic, electromagnetic, electro bimorph thermal, electrowetting, piezoelectric (PZT) and hybrid actuators, are adopted by different types of micromirrors. Among these actuators, the electrostatic is easily understood and simple to realize, therefore, it is broadly adopted by a large number of micromirrors. This thesis reports the design, fabrication, and characterization of a 2-D Silicon-on-insulation (SOI) MEMS micromirror with sidewall (SW) electrodes for endoscopic OCT or confocal microscope imaging. The biaxial MEMS mirror with SW electrodes is actuated by electrostatic actuators. The dimension of mirror plate is 1000micron×1000micron, with a thickness of a 35micron. The analytical modeling of SW electrodes, fabrication process, and performance characteristics are described. In comparison to traditional electrostatic actuators, parallel-plate and comb-drive, SW electrodes combined with bottom electrodes achieve a large tilt angle under a low drive voltage that the comb-drive does and possess fairly simple fabrication process same as that of the parallel-plate. A new fabrication process based on SOI wafer, hybrid bulk/surface micromachined technology, and a high-aspect-ratio shadow mask is presented. Moreover, the fabrication process is successfully extended to fabricate 2×2 and 4×4 micromirror arrays. Finally, a biaxial MEMS mirror with SW electrodes was used into Confocal MACROscope for imaging. Studied optical requirements in terms of two optical configurations and frequency optimization of the micromirror, the biaxial MEMS mirror replaces the galvo-scanner and improves the MACROscope. Meanwhile, a new Micromirror-based Laser Scanning Microscope system is presented and allows 2D images to be acquired and displayed

    Inherently Elastic Actuation for Soft Robotics

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    Robotic System Development for Precision MRI-Guided Needle-Based Interventions

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    This dissertation describes the development of a methodology for implementing robotic systems for interventional procedures under intraoperative Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) guidance. MRI is an ideal imaging modality for surgical guidance of diagnostic and therapeutic procedures, thanks to its ability to perform high resolution, real-time, and high soft tissue contrast imaging without ionizing radiation. However, the strong magnetic field and sensitivity to radio frequency signals, as well as tightly confined scanner bore render great challenges to developing robotic systems within MRI environment. Discussed are potential solutions to address engineering topics related to development of MRI-compatible electro-mechanical systems and modeling of steerable needle interventions. A robotic framework is developed based on a modular design approach, supporting varying MRI-guided interventional procedures, with stereotactic neurosurgery and prostate cancer therapy as two driving exemplary applications. A piezoelectrically actuated electro-mechanical system is designed to provide precise needle placement in the bore of the scanner under interactive MRI-guidance, while overcoming the challenges inherent to MRI-guided procedures. This work presents the development of the robotic system in the aspects of requirements definition, clinical work flow development, mechanism optimization, control system design and experimental evaluation. A steerable needle is beneficial for interventional procedures with its capability to produce curved path, avoiding anatomical obstacles or compensating for needle placement errors. Two kinds of steerable needles are discussed, i.e. asymmetric-tip needle and concentric-tube cannula. A novel Gaussian-based ContinUous Rotation and Variable-curvature (CURV) model is proposed to steer asymmetric-tip needle, which enables variable curvature of the needle trajectory with independent control of needle rotation and insertion. While concentric-tube cannula is suitable for clinical applications where a curved trajectory is needed without relying on tissue interaction force. This dissertation addresses fundamental challenges in developing and deploying MRI-compatible robotic systems, and enables the technologies for MRI-guided needle-based interventions. This study applied and evaluated these techniques to a system for prostate biopsy that is currently in clinical trials, developed a neurosurgery robot prototype for interstitial thermal therapy of brain cancer under MRI guidance, and demonstrated needle steering using both asymmetric tip and pre-bent concentric-tube cannula approaches on a testbed

    Performance Improvement of Smart Fin with Piezoelectric Actuator under High Speed Flight Condition

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    학위논문 (석사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 기계항공공학부, 2015. 2. 신상준.In order to substitute a conventional fin operated by hydraulic actuator, structural analysis of three smart fins embedded with single crystal composite piezoelectric actuators was attempted in this thesis. Structural analysis on piezoelectric actuators employed on the present smart fins using ANSYS showed good correlation with the in-house MATLAB simulation based on classical laminated plate theory, and experimental result. Structural behaviors were analyzed regarding the resulting deflections for each smart fin under specific voltage input. In addition, computational fluid dynamics analysis was conducted on the structures so as to derive the final deflection under aerodynamic load of Mach number 0.5 flight. The present designs and analysis will be extend-ed to future applications such as the control surface component in the wing structures of the unmanned air vehicle and commercial aircraft.List of Figures …………………………………………………………… iv List of Tables …………………………………………………………… viii Nomenclature ……………………………………………………………… ix Chapter 1 Introduction ………………………………………………… 1 1.1 Background of the thesis …………………………………… 1 1.2 Summary of the preceding researches ………………… 4 1.3 Purpose and range of Scope of the thesis ……………… 6 Chapter 2 Theoretical Background ……………………………… 17 2.1 Classical Laminated Plate Theory ……………………… 17 2.2 Open and Closed Circuit condition of Piezoelectric Bodies …………………………………………………………… 20 2.3 Analysis theories used in ANSYS …………………………………………………………………… 22 2.4 Analysis theories used in ANSYS Fluent …………… 23 2.5 Analysis theories used in MSC. NASTRAN ………… 26 2.6 Analysis theories used in ZAERO ……………………… 29 Chapter 3 Description of Present Smart Fin Structures … 34 3.1 Design Candidate 1 …………………………………………… 34 3.2 Design Candidate 2 …………………………………………… 35 3.3 Design Candidate 3 …………………………………………… 36 3.4 Design Candidate 4 …………………………………………… 37 Chapter 4 Numerical and Experimental Results …………… 56 4.1 Piezoelectric actuator ……………………………………… 56 4.2 Structural analysis of the present smart fins ……… 59 4.2.1 Design Candidate 1 ……………………………… 60 4.2.1 Design Candidate 2 ……………………………… 60 4.2.3 Design Candidate 3 ……………………………… 61 4.2.4 Design Candidate 4 ……………………………… 62 4.3 Flutter analysis of the present smart fins ………… 64 Chapter 5 Conclusion ………………………………………………… 90 5.1 Conclusion ……………………………………………………… 90 5.2 Future Works …………………………………………………… 93 5.2.1 Design Refinement ………………………………… 93 5.2.2 Hysteresis Analysis ……………………………… 94 5.2.3 Contact Analysis …………………………………… 95 5.2.4 Flutter Analysis …………………………………… 95 5.2.5 Comparison with experimental result ……… 96 Reference ………………………………………………………………… 97 국문초록 ………………………………………………………………… 102Maste

    The Fifth NASA/DOD Controls-Structures Interaction Technology Conference, part 1

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    This publication is a compilation of the papers presented at the Fifth NASA/DoD Controls-Structures Interaction (CSI) Technology Conference held in Lake Tahoe, Nevada, March 3-5, 1992. The conference, which was jointly sponsored by the NASA Office of Aeronautics and Space Technology and the Department of Defense, was organized by the NASA Langley Research Center. The purpose of this conference was to report to industry, academia, and government agencies on the current status of controls-structures interaction technology. The agenda covered ground testing, integrated design, analysis, flight experiments and concepts
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