5,010 research outputs found

    Design of a fuzzy PID controller for a MEMS tunable capacitor for noise reduction in a voltage reference source

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    This study presents a conventional Ziegler-Nichols (ZN) Proportional Integral Derivative (PID) controller, having reviewed the mathematical modeling of the Micro Electro Mechanical Systems (MEMS) Tunable Capacitors (TCs), and also proposes a fuzzy PID controller which demonstrates a better tracking performance in the presence of measurement noise, in comparison with conventional ZN-based PID controllers. Referring to importance and impact of this research, the proposed controller takes advantage of fuzzy control properties such as robustness against noise. TCs are responsible for regulating the reference voltage when integrated into Alternating Current (AC) Voltage Reference Sources (VRS). Capacitance regulation for tunable capacitors in VRS is carried out by modulating the distance of a movable plate. A successful modulation depends on maintaining the stability around the pull-in point. This distance regulation can be achieved by the proposed controller which guarantees the tracking performance of the movable plate in moving towards the pull-in point, and remaining in this critical position. The simulation results of the tracking performance and capacitance tuning are very promising, subjected to measurement noise. Article Highlights This article deals with MEMS tunable capacitor dynamics and modeling, considering measurement noise. It designs and applies fuzzy PID control system for regulating MEMS voltage reference output. This paper contributes to robustness increase in pull-in performance of the tunable capacitor

    Design of a fuzzy PID controller for a MEMS tunable capacitor for noise reduction in a voltage reference source

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    This study presents a conventional Ziegler-Nichols (ZN) Proportional Integral Derivative (PID) controller, having reviewed the mathematical modeling of the Micro Electro Mechanical Systems (MEMS) Tunable Capacitors (TCs), and also proposes a fuzzy PID controller which demonstrates a better tracking performance in the presence of measurement noise, in comparison with conventional ZN-based PID controllers. Referring to importance and impact of this research, the proposed controller takes advantage of fuzzy control properties such as robustness against noise. TCs are responsible for regulating the reference voltage when integrated into Alternating Current (AC) Voltage Reference Sources (VRS). Capacitance regulation for tunable capacitors in VRS is carried out by modulating the distance of a movable plate. A successful modulation depends on maintaining the stability around the pull-in point. This distance regulation can be achieved by the proposed controller which guarantees the tracking performance of the movable plate in moving towards the pull-in point, and remaining in this critical position. The simulation results of the tracking performance and capacitance tuning are very promising, subjected to measurement nois

    Stabilizing control of two-wheeled wheelchair with movable payload using optimized interval type-2 fuzzy logic

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    The control schemes of a wheelchair having two wheels with movable payload utilizing the concept of a double-link inverted pendulum have been investigated in this article. The proposed wheelchair has been simulated using SimWise 4D software considering the most efficient parameters. These parameters are extracted using the spiral dynamic algorithm while being controlled with interval type-2 fuzzy logic controller (IT2FLC). The robustness and stability of the implemented controller are assessed under different situations including standing upright, forward motion and application of varying directions and magnitudes of outer disturbances to movable (up and down) system payload. It is shown that the two-wheeled wheelchair adopted by the newly introduced controller has achieved a 94% drop in torque for both Link1 and Link2 and more than 98% fall in distance travelled in comparison with fuzzy logic control type-1 (FLCT1) controller employed in an earlier design. The present study has further considered the increased nonlinearity and complexity of the additional moving payload. From the outcome of this study, it is obvious that the proposed IT2FLC-spiral dynamic algorithm demonstrates better performance than FLCT1 to manage the uncertainties and nonlinearities in case of a movable payload two-wheel wheelchair system

    Model reference control for ultra-high precision positioning systems

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    Due to the increasing demands of high-density semiconductors, molecular biology, optoelectronics, and MEMS/NEMS in the past decades, control of ultra-high precision positioning using piezoelectricity has become an important area because of its high displacement resolution, wide bandwidth, low power consumption, and potential low cost. However, the relatively small displacement range limits its application. This work proposed a practical ultra-high precision piezoelectric positioning system with a complementary high displacement range actuation technology. Solenoids are low cost, high speed electromagnetic actuators which are commonly used in on-off mode only because of the inherent high nonlinear force-stroke characteristics and unipolar forces (push/pull) generated by the magnetic fields. In this work, an integrated positioning system based on a monolithic piezoelectric positioner and a set of push-pull dual solenoid actuators is designed for high speed and high precision positioning applications. The overall resolution can be sub-nanometer while the moving range is in millimeters, a three order of magnitude increase from using piezoelectric positioner alone. The dynamic models of the dual solenoid actuator and piezoelectric nanopositioner are derived. The main challenge of designing such positioning systems is to maintain the accuracy and stability in the presence of un-modeled dynamics, plant variations, and parasitic nonlinearities, specifically in this work, the friction and forcestroke nonlinearities of the dual solenoid actuator, and the friction, hysteresis and coupling effects of piezoelectric actuator, which are impossible to be modeled accurately and even time-varying. A model reference design approach is presented to attenuate linear as well as nonlinear uncertainties, with a fixed order controller augmenting a reference model that embeds the nominal dynamics of the plant. To improve transient characteristics, a Variable Model Reference Zero Vibration (VMRZV) control is also proposed to stabilize the system and attenuate the adverse effect of parasitic nonlinearities of micro-/nano- positioning actuators and command-induced vibrations. The speed of the ultra-high precision system with VMRZV control can also be quantitatively adjusted by systematically varying the reference model. This novel control method improves the robustness and performance significantly. Preliminary experimental data on dual solenoid system confirm the feasibility of the proposed method

    SPRK: A Low-Cost Stewart Platform For Motion Study In Surgical Robotics

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    To simulate body organ motion due to breathing, heart beats, or peristaltic movements, we designed a low-cost, miniaturized SPRK (Stewart Platform Research Kit) to translate and rotate phantom tissue. This platform is 20cm x 20cm x 10cm to fit in the workspace of a da Vinci Research Kit (DVRK) surgical robot and costs $250, two orders of magnitude less than a commercial Stewart platform. The platform has a range of motion of +/- 1.27 cm in translation along x, y, and z directions and has motion modes for sinusoidal motion and breathing-inspired motion. Modular platform mounts were also designed for pattern cutting and debridement experiments. The platform's positional controller has a time-constant of 0.2 seconds and the root-mean-square error is 1.22 mm, 1.07 mm, and 0.20 mm in x, y, and z directions respectively. All the details, CAD models, and control software for the platform is available at github.com/BerkeleyAutomation/sprk

    RUR53: an Unmanned Ground Vehicle for Navigation, Recognition and Manipulation

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    This paper proposes RUR53: an Unmanned Ground Vehicle able to autonomously navigate through, identify, and reach areas of interest; and there recognize, localize, and manipulate work tools to perform complex manipulation tasks. The proposed contribution includes a modular software architecture where each module solves specific sub-tasks and that can be easily enlarged to satisfy new requirements. Included indoor and outdoor tests demonstrate the capability of the proposed system to autonomously detect a target object (a panel) and precisely dock in front of it while avoiding obstacles. They show it can autonomously recognize and manipulate target work tools (i.e., wrenches and valve stems) to accomplish complex tasks (i.e., use a wrench to rotate a valve stem). A specific case study is described where the proposed modular architecture lets easy switch to a semi-teleoperated mode. The paper exhaustively describes description of both the hardware and software setup of RUR53, its performance when tests at the 2017 Mohamed Bin Zayed International Robotics Challenge, and the lessons we learned when participating at this competition, where we ranked third in the Gran Challenge in collaboration with the Czech Technical University in Prague, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Lincoln (UK).Comment: This article has been accepted for publication in Advanced Robotics, published by Taylor & Franci

    Control of a Movable Robot Head Using Vision-Based Object Tracking

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    This paper presents a visual tracking system to support the movement of the robot head for detecting the existence of objects. Object identification and object position estimation were conducted using image-based processing. The movement of the robot head was in four directions namely  to the right, left, top, and bottom of the robot head. Based on the distance of the object, it shifted the object to many points to assess the accuracy of the process of tracking the object. The targeted objects are detected through several processes, namely normalization of RGB images, thresholding, and object marking. The process of tracking the object conducted by the robot head varied in 40 various object points with high accuracy. The further the object’s distance to the robot, the smaller the corner of the movement of the robot produced compared to the movement of the robot head to track an object that was closer even though with the same distance stimulant shift object. However, for the distance and the shift of the same object, the level of accuracy showed almost the same results. The results showed the movement of the robot head to track the object under the head of the robot produced the movement with a larger angular error compared to the movement of the robot head in another direction even though with the stimulant distance of the same object position and the distance shift of the same object

    Uncalibrated Dynamic Mechanical System Controller

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    An apparatus and method for enabling an uncalibrated, model independent controller for a mechanical system using a dynamic quasi-Newton algorithm which incorporates velocity components of any moving system parameter(s) is provided. In the preferred embodiment, tracking of a moving target by a robot having multiple degrees of freedom is achieved using an uncalibrated model independent visual servo control. Model independent visual servo control is defined as using visual feedback to control a robot's servomotors without a precisely calibrated kinematic robot model or camera model. A processor updates a Jacobian and a controller provides control signals such that the robot's end effector is directed to a desired location relative to a target on a workpiece.Georgia Tech Research Corporatio

    Improving robotic machining accuracy through experimental error investigation and modular compensation

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    Machining using industrial robots is currently limited to applications with low geometrical accuracies and soft materials. This paper analyzes the sources of errors in robotic machining and characterizes them in amplitude and frequency. Experiments under different conditions represent a typical set of industrial applications and allow a qualified evaluation. Based on this analysis, a modular approach is proposed to overcome these obstacles, applied both during program generation (offline) and execution (online). Predictive offline compensation of machining errors is achieved by means of an innovative programming system, based on kinematic and dynamic robot models. Real-time adaptive machining error compensation is also provided by sensing the real robot positions with an innovative tracking system and corrective feedback to both the robot and an additional high-dynamic compensation mechanism on piezo-actuator basis
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