18 research outputs found
A research on a reconfigurable hypar structure for architectural applications
Thesis (Master)--İzmir Institute of Technology, Architecture, İzmir, 2013Includes bibliographical references (leaves: 102-108)Text in English; Abstract: Turkish and Englishxii, 108 leavesKinetic design strategy is a way to obtain remarkable applications in architecture. These kinetic designs can offer more advantages compared to conventional ones. Basic knowledge of different disciplines is necessary to generate kinetic designs. In other words, interdisciplinary studies are critical. Therefore, architect's knowledge must be wide-ranging in order to increase novel design approaches and applications. The resulting rich hybrid products increase the potential of the disciplines individually. Research on kinetic structures shows that the majority of kinetic structures are deployable. However, deployable structures can only be transformed from a closed compact configuration to a predetermined expanded form. The motivation of the present dissertation is generating a novel 2 DOF 8R reconfigurable structure which can meet different hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces for architectural applications. In order to obtain this novel structure; the integration between the mechanism science and architecture is essential. The term reconfigurable will be used in the present dissertation to describe deployable structures with various configurations. The novel reconfigurable design utilizes the overconstrained Bennett linkage and the production principals of ruled surfaces. The dissertation begins with a brief summary of deployable structures to show their shortcomings and their lack of form flexibility. Afterward, curved surfaces, basic terms in mechanisms and overconstrained mechanisms were investigated. Finally, a proposed novel mechanism which is inspired from the basic design principles of Bennett linkage and the fundamentals of ruled surfaces are explained with the help of kinematic diagrams and models
Polynomial continuation in the design of deployable structures
Polynomial continuation, a branch of numerical continuation, has been applied
to several primary problems in kinematic geometry. The objective of
the research presented in this document was to explore the possible extensions
of the application of polynomial continuation, especially in the field
of deployable structure design. The power of polynomial continuation as a
design tool lies in its ability to find all solutions of a system of polynomial
equations (even positive dimensional solution sets). A linkage design problem
posed in polynomial form can be made to yield every possible feasible
outcome, many of which may never otherwise have been found.
Methods of polynomial continuation based design are illustrated here by way
of various examples. In particular, the types of deployable structures which
form planar rings, or frames, in their deployed configurations are used as
design cases. Polynomial continuation is shown to be a powerful component
of an equation-based design process.
A polyhedral homotopy method, particularly suited to solving problems in
kinematics, was synthesised from several researchers’ published continuation
techniques, and augmented with modern, freely available mathematical
computing algorithms. Special adaptations were made in the areas of level-k
subface identification, lifting value balancing, and path-following. Techniques
of forming closure/compatibility equations by direct use of symmetry,
or by use of transfer matrices to enforce loop closure, were developed as appropriate
for each example.
The geometry of a plane symmetric (rectangular) 6R foldable frame was examined
and classified in terms of Denavit-Hartenberg Parameters. Its design
parameters were then grouped into feasible and non-feasible regions, before
continuation was used as a design tool; generating the design parameters
required to build a foldable frame which meets certain configurational specifications.
iv
Two further deployable ring/frame classes were then used as design cases:
(a) rings which form (planar) regular polygons when deployed, and (b) rings
which are doubly plane symmetric and planar when deployed. The governing
equations used in the continuation design process are based on symmetry
compatibility and transfer matrices respectively.
Finally, the 6, 7 and 8-link versions of N-loops were subjected to a witness
set analysis, illustrating the way in which continuation can reveal the nature
of the mobility of an unknown linkage.
Key features of the results are that polynomial continuation was able to provide
complete sets of feasible options to a number of practical design problems,
and also to reveal the nature of the mobility of a real overconstrained
linkage
MUSME 2011 4 th International Symposium on Multibody Systems and Mechatronics
El libro de actas recoge las aportaciones de los autores a través de los correspondientes artículos a la Dinámica de Sistemas Multicuerpo y la Mecatrónica (Musme). Estas disciplinas se han convertido en una importante herramienta para diseñar máquinas, analizar prototipos virtuales y realizar análisis CAD sobre complejos sistemas mecánicos articulados multicuerpo. La dinámica de sistemas multicuerpo comprende un gran número de aspectos que incluyen la mecánica, dinámica estructural, matemáticas aplicadas, métodos de control, ciencia de los ordenadores y mecatrónica. Los artículos recogidos en el libro de actas están relacionados con alguno de los siguientes tópicos del congreso:
Análisis y síntesis de mecanismos
; Diseño de algoritmos para sistemas mecatrónicos
; Procedimientos de simulación y resultados
; Prototipos y rendimiento
; Robots y micromáquinas
; Validaciones experimentales
; Teoría de simulación mecatrónica
; Sistemas mecatrónicos
; Control de sistemas mecatrónicosUniversitat Politècnica de València (2011). MUSME 2011 4 th International Symposium on Multibody Systems and Mechatronics. Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València. http://hdl.handle.net/10251/13224Archivo delegad
Advances in Robot Kinematics : Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Advances in Robot Kinematics
International audienceThe motion of mechanisms, kinematics, is one of the most fundamental aspect of robot design, analysis and control but is also relevant to other scientific domains such as biome- chanics, molecular biology, . . . . The series of books on Advances in Robot Kinematics (ARK) report the latest achievement in this field. ARK has a long history as the first book was published in 1991 and since then new issues have been published every 2 years. Each book is the follow-up of a single-track symposium in which the participants exchange their results and opinions in a meeting that bring together the best of world’s researchers and scientists together with young students. Since 1992 the ARK symposia have come under the patronage of the International Federation for the Promotion of Machine Science-IFToMM.This book is the 13th in the series and is the result of peer-review process intended to select the newest and most original achievements in this field. For the first time the articles of this symposium will be published in a green open-access archive to favor free dissemination of the results. However the book will also be o↵ered as a on-demand printed book.The papers proposed in this book show that robot kinematics is an exciting domain with an immense number of research challenges that go well beyond the field of robotics.The last symposium related with this book was organized by the French National Re- search Institute in Computer Science and Control Theory (INRIA) in Grasse, France
Kinematics and Robot Design I, KaRD2018
This volume collects the papers published on the Special Issue “Kinematics and Robot Design I, KaRD2018” (https://www.mdpi.com/journal/robotics/special_issues/KARD), which is the first issue of the KaRD Special Issue series, hosted by the open access journal “MDPI Robotics”. The KaRD series aims at creating an open environment where researchers can present their works and discuss all the topics focused on the many aspects that involve kinematics in the design of robotic/automatic systems. Kinematics is so intimately related to the design of robotic/automatic systems that the admitted topics of the KaRD series practically cover all the subjects normally present in well-established international conferences on “mechanisms and robotics”. KaRD2018 received 22 papers and, after the peer-review process, accepted only 14 papers. The accepted papers cover some theoretical and many design/applicative aspects
Advanced Strategies for Robot Manipulators
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
Industrial Robotics
This book covers a wide range of topics relating to advanced industrial robotics, sensors and automation technologies. Although being highly technical and complex in nature, the papers presented in this book represent some of the latest cutting edge technologies and advancements in industrial robotics technology. This book covers topics such as networking, properties of manipulators, forward and inverse robot arm kinematics, motion path-planning, machine vision and many other practical topics too numerous to list here. The authors and editor of this book wish to inspire people, especially young ones, to get involved with robotic and mechatronic engineering technology and to develop new and exciting practical applications, perhaps using the ideas and concepts presented herein