1,966 research outputs found
Robust tuning of robot control systems
The computed torque control problem is examined for a robot arm with flexible, geared, joint drive systems which are typical in many industrial robots. The standard computed torque algorithm is not directly applicable to this class of manipulators because of the dynamics introduced by the joint drive system. The proposed approach to computed torque control combines a computed torque algorithm with torque controller at each joint. Three such control schemes are proposed. The first scheme uses the joint torque control system currently implemented on the robot arm and a novel form of the computed torque algorithm. The other two use the standard computed torque algorithm and a novel model following torque control system based on model following techniques. Standard tasks and performance indices are used to evaluate the performance of the controllers. Both numerical simulations and experiments are used in evaluation. The study shows that all three proposed systems lead to improved tracking performance over a conventional PD controller
Integral Resonant Control for vibration damping and precise tip-positioning of a single-link flexible manipulator
Peer reviewedPostprin
CSI related dynamics and control issues in space robotics
The research addressed includes: (1) CSI issues in space robotics; (2) control of elastic payloads, which includes 1-DOF example, and 3-DOF harmonic drive arm with elastic beam; and (3) control of large space arms with elastic links, which includes testbed description, modeling, and experimental implementation of colocated PD and end-point tip position controllers
A Stability Analysis for the Acceleration-based Robust Position Control of Robot Manipulators via Disturbance Observer
This paper proposes a new nonlinear stability analysis for the
acceleration-based robust position control of robot manipulators by using
Disturbance Observer (DOb). It is shown that if the nominal inertia matrix is
properly tuned in the design of DOb, then the position error asymptotically
goes to zero in regulation control and is uniformly ultimately bounded in
trajectory tracking control. As the bandwidth of DOb and the nominal inertia
matrix are increased, the bound of error shrinks, i.e., the robust stability
and performance of the position control system are improved. However, neither
the bandwidth of DOb nor the nominal inertia matrix can be freely increased due
to practical design constraints, e.g., the robust position controller becomes
more noise sensitive when they are increased. The proposed stability analysis
provides insights regarding the dynamic behavior of DOb-based robust motion
control systems. It is theoretically and experimentally proved that
non-diagonal elements of the nominal inertia matrix are useful to improve the
stability and adjust the trade-off between the robustness and noise
sensitivity. The validity of the proposal is verified by simulation and
experimental results.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, Journa
Position control of redundant manipulators using an adaptive error-based control scheme
A Cartesian-space control scheme is developed to control the motion of kinematically redundant manipulators with 7 degrees of freedom (DOF). The control scheme consists mainly of proportional derivative (PD) controllers whose gains are adjusted by an adaptation law driven by the errors between the desired and actual trajectories. The adaptation law is derived using the concept of model reference adaptive control (MRAC) and Lyapunov direct method under the assumption that the manipulator performs non-compliant and slowly-varying motions. The developed control scheme is computationally efficient because its implementation does not require the computation of the manipulator dynamics. Computer simulation performed to evaluate the control scheme performance is presented and discussed
Design of an adaptive controller for a telerobot manipulator
The design of a joint-space adaptive control scheme is presented for controlling the slave arm motion of a dual-arm telerobot system developed at Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) to study telerobotic operations in space. Each slave arm of the dual-arm system is a kinematically redundant manipulator with 7 degrees of freedom (DOF). Using the concept of model reference adaptive control (MRAC) and Lyapunov direct method, an adatation algorithm is derived which adjusts the PD controller gains of the control scheme. The development of the adaptive control scheme assumes that the slave arm motion is non-compliant and slowly-varying. The implementation of the derived control scheme does not need the computation of the manipulator dynamics, which makes the control scheme sufficiently fast for real-time applications. Computer simulation study performed for the 7-DOF slave arm shows that the developed control scheme can efficiently adapt to sudden change in payloads while tracking various test trajectories such as ramp or sinusoids with negligible position errors
A passivity based control methodology for flexible joint robots with application to a simplified shuttle RMS arm
The main goal is to develop a general theory for the control of flexible robots, including flexible joint robots, flexible link robots, rigid bodies with flexible appendages, etc. As part of the validation, the theory is applied to the control law development for a test example which consists of a three-link arm modeled after the shoulder yaw joint of the space shuttle remote manipulator system (RMS). The performance of the closed loop control system is then compared with the performance of the existing RMS controller to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach. The theoretical foundation of this new approach to the control of flexible robots is presented and its efficacy is demonstrated through simulation results on the three-link test arm
A novel spherical actuator: Design and control
The paper describes the design and control of a novel spherical permanent magnet actuator which is capable of two-degrees-freedom and a high specific torque. Based on an analytical actuator model, an optimal design procedure is developed to yield maximum output torque or maximum system acceleration for a given payload. The control of the actuator, whose dynamics are similar to those of robotic manipulators, is facilitated by the establishment of a complete actuation system model. A robust control law is applied, and its effectiveness is demonstrated by computer simulatio
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