135 research outputs found

    Workshop on "Robotic assembly of 3D MEMS".

    No full text
    Proceedings of a workshop proposed in IEEE IROS'2007.The increase of MEMS' functionalities often requires the integration of various technologies used for mechanical, optical and electronic subsystems in order to achieve a unique system. These different technologies have usually process incompatibilities and the whole microsystem can not be obtained monolithically and then requires microassembly steps. Microassembly of MEMS based on micrometric components is one of the most promising approaches to achieve high-performance MEMS. Moreover, microassembly also permits to develop suitable MEMS packaging as well as 3D components although microfabrication technologies are usually able to create 2D and "2.5D" components. The study of microassembly methods is consequently a high stake for MEMS technologies growth. Two approaches are currently developped for microassembly: self-assembly and robotic microassembly. In the first one, the assembly is highly parallel but the efficiency and the flexibility still stay low. The robotic approach has the potential to reach precise and reliable assembly with high flexibility. The proposed workshop focuses on this second approach and will take a bearing of the corresponding microrobotic issues. Beyond the microfabrication technologies, performing MEMS microassembly requires, micromanipulation strategies, microworld dynamics and attachment technologies. The design and the fabrication of the microrobot end-effectors as well as the assembled micro-parts require the use of microfabrication technologies. Moreover new micromanipulation strategies are necessary to handle and position micro-parts with sufficiently high accuracy during assembly. The dynamic behaviour of micrometric objects has also to be studied and controlled. Finally, after positioning the micro-part, attachment technologies are necessary

    PLANNING FOR AUTOMATED OPTICAL MICROMANIPULATION OF BIOLOGICAL CELLS

    Get PDF
    Optical tweezers (OT) can be viewed as a robot that uses a highly focused laser beam for precise manipulation of biological objects and dielectric beads at micro-scale. Using holographic optical tweezers (HOT) multiple optical traps can be created to allow several operations in parallel. Moreover, due to the non-contact nature of manipulation OT can be potentially integrated with other manipulation techniques (e.g. microfluidics, acoustics, magnetics etc.) to ensure its high throughput. However, biological manipulation using OT suffers from two serious drawbacks: (1) slow manipulation due to manual operation and (2) severe effects on cell viability due to direct exposure of laser. This dissertation explores the problem of autonomous OT based cell manipulation in the light of addressing the two aforementioned limitations. Microfluidic devices are well suited for the study of biological objects because of their high throughput. Integrating microfluidics with OT provides precise position control as well as high throughput. An automated, physics-aware, planning approach is developed for fast transport of cells in OT assisted microfluidic chambers. The heuristic based planner employs a specific cost function for searching over a novel state-action space representation. The effectiveness of the planning algorithm is demonstrated using both simulation and physical experiments in microfluidic-optical tweezers hybrid manipulation setup. An indirect manipulation approach is developed for preventing cells from high intensity laser. Optically trapped inert microspheres are used for manipulating cells indirectly either by gripping or pushing. A novel planning and control approach is devised to automate the indirect manipulation of cells. The planning algorithm takes the motion constraints of the gripper or pushing formation into account to minimize the manipulation time. Two different types of cells (Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Dictyostelium discoideum) are manipulated to demonstrate the effectiveness of the indirect manipulation approach

    Control techniques for mechatronic assisted surgery

    Get PDF
    The treatment response for traumatic head injured patients can be improved by using an autonomous robotic system to perform basic, time-critical emergency neurosurgery, reducing costs and saving lives. In this thesis, a concept for a neurosurgical robotic system is proposed to perform three specific emergency neurosurgical procedures; they are the placement of an intracranial pressure monitor, external ventricular drainage, and the evacuation of chronic subdural haematoma. The control methods for this system are investigated following a curiosity led approach. Individual problems are interpreted in the widest sense and solutions posed that are general in nature. Three main contributions result from this approach: 1) a clinical evidence based review of surgical robotics and a methodology to assist in their evaluation, 2) a new controller for soft-grasping of objects, and 3) new propositions and theorems for chatter suppression sliding mode controllers. These contributions directly assist in the design of the control system of the neurosurgical robot and, more broadly, impact other areas outside the narrow con nes of the target application. A methodology for applied research in surgical robotics is proposed. The methodology sets out a hierarchy of criteria consisting of three tiers, with the most important being the bottom tier and the least being the top tier. It is argued that a robotic system must adhere to these criteria in order to achieve acceptability. Recent commercial systems are reviewed against these criteria, and are found to conform up to at least the bottom and intermediate tiers. However, the lack of conformity to the criteria in the top tier, combined with the inability to conclusively prove increased clinical benefit, particularly symptomatic benefit, is shown to be hampering the potential of surgical robotics in gaining wide establishment. A control scheme for soft-grasping objects is presented. Grasping a soft or fragile object requires the use of minimum contact force to prevent damage or deformation. Without precise knowledge of object parameters, real-time feedback control must be used to regulate the contact force and prevent slip. Moreover, the controller must be designed to have good performance characteristics to rapidly modulate the fingertip contact force in response to a slip event. A fuzzy sliding mode controller combined with a disturbance observer is proposed for contact force control and slip prevention. The robustness of the controller is evaluated through both simulation and experiment. The control scheme was found to be effective and robust to parameter uncertainty. When tested on a real system, however, chattering phenomena, well known to sliding mode research, was induced by the unmodelled suboptimal components of the system (filtering, backlash, and time delays). This reduced the controller performance. The problem of chattering and potential solutions are explored. Real systems using sliding mode controllers, such as the control scheme for soft-grasping, have a tendency to chatter at high frequencies. This is caused by the sliding mode controller interacting with un-modelled parasitic dynamics at the actuator-input and sensor-output of the plant. As a result, new chatter-suppression sliding mode controllers have been developed, which introduce new parameters into the system. However, the effect any particular choice of parameters has on system performance is unclear, and this can make tuning the parameters to meet a set of performance criteria di cult. In this thesis, common chatter-suppression sliding mode control strategies are surveyed and simple design and estimation methods are proposed. The estimation methods predict convergence, chattering amplitude, settling time, and maximum output bounds (overshoot) using harmonic linearizations and invariant ellipsoid sets

    対象物体と指配置のコンフィグレーション空間を用いた不確かさを扱える効率的なケージング計画

    Get PDF
    学位の種別:課程博士University of Tokyo(東京大学

    Conference on Intelligent Robotics in Field, Factory, Service, and Space (CIRFFSS 1994), volume 1

    Get PDF
    The AIAA/NASA Conference on Intelligent Robotics in Field, Factory, Service, and Space (CIRFFSS '94) was originally proposed because of the strong belief that America's problems of global economic competitiveness and job creation and preservation can partly be solved by the use of intelligent robotics, which are also required for human space exploration missions. Individual sessions addressed nuclear industry, agile manufacturing, security/building monitoring, on-orbit applications, vision and sensing technologies, situated control and low-level control, robotic systems architecture, environmental restoration and waste management, robotic remanufacturing, and healthcare applications

    Distributed framework for a multi-purpose household robotic arm

    Get PDF
    Projecte final de carrera fet en col.laboració amb l'Institut de Robòtica i Informàtica IndustrialThe concept of household robotic servants has been in our mind for ages, and domestic appliances are far more robotised than they used to be. At present, manufacturers are starting to introduce small, household human-interactive robots to the market. Any human-interactive device has safety, endurability and simplicity constraints, which are especially strict when it comes to robots. Indeed, we are still far from a multi-purpose intelligent household robot, but human-interactive robots and arti cial intelligence research has evolved considerably, demonstration prototypes are a proof of what can be done. This project contributes to the research in humaninteractive robots, as the robotic arm and hand used are specially designed for human-interactive applications. The present study provides a distributed framework for an arm and a hand devices based on the robotics YARP protocol using the WAMTM arm and the BarrettHandTM as well as a basic modular client application complemented with vision. Firstly, two device drivers and a network interface are designed and implemented to control the WAMTM arm and the BarrettHandTM from the network. The drivers allow abstract access to each device, providing three ports: command requests port, state requests port and asynchronous replies port. Secondly, each driver is then encapsulated by YARP devices publishing realtime monitoring feedback and motion control to the network through what is called a Network wrapper. In particular, the network wrapper for the WAMTM arm and BarrettHandTM provides a state port, command port, Remote Procedure Call (RPC) port and an asynchronous noti cations port. The state port provides the WAMTM position and orientation feedback at 50 Hz, which represents a maximum blindness of one centimetre. This rst part of the project sets the foundations of a distributed, complete robot, whose design enables processing and power payload to be shared by di erent workstations. Moreover, users are able to work with the robot remotely over Ethernet and Wireless through a clear, understandable local interface within YARP. In addition to the distributed robotic framework provided, a client software framework with vision is also supplied. The client framework establishes a general software shell for further development and is organized in the basic, separate robotic branches: control, vision and plani cation. The vision module supports distributed image grabbing on mobile robotics, and shared-memory for xed, local vision. In order to incorporate environment interaction and robot autonomy with the planner, hand-eye transformation matrices have been obtained to perform object grasping and manipulation. The image processing is based on OpenCV libraries and provides object recognition with Scale Invariant Feature Transform (SIFT) features matching, Hough transform and polygon approximation algorithms. Grasping and path planning use pre-de ned grasps which take into account the size, shape and orientation of the target objects. The proof-of-concept applications feature a household robotic arm with the ability to tidy randomly distributed common kitchen objects to speci ed locations, with robot real-time monitoring and basic control. The device modularity introduced in this project philosophy of decoupling communication, device local access and the components, was successful. Thanks to the abstract access and decoupling, the demonstration applications provided were easily deployed to test the arm's performance and its remote control and monitorization. Moreover, both resultant frameworks are arm-independent and the design is currently being adopted by other projects' devices within the IRI

    Proceedings of the NASA Conference on Space Telerobotics, volume 3

    Get PDF
    The theme of the Conference was man-machine collaboration in space. The Conference provided a forum for researchers and engineers to exchange ideas on the research and development required for application of telerobotics technology to the space systems planned for the 1990s and beyond. The Conference: (1) provided a view of current NASA telerobotic research and development; (2) stimulated technical exchange on man-machine systems, manipulator control, machine sensing, machine intelligence, concurrent computation, and system architectures; and (3) identified important unsolved problems of current interest which can be dealt with by future research

    Impact of Ear Occlusion on In-Ear Sounds Generated by Intra-oral Behaviors

    Get PDF
    We conducted a case study with one volunteer and a recording setup to detect sounds induced by the actions: jaw clenching, tooth grinding, reading, eating, and drinking. The setup consisted of two in-ear microphones, where the left ear was semi-occluded with a commercially available earpiece and the right ear was occluded with a mouldable silicon ear piece. Investigations in the time and frequency domains demonstrated that for behaviors such as eating, tooth grinding, and reading, sounds could be recorded with both sensors. For jaw clenching, however, occluding the ear with a mouldable piece was necessary to enable its detection. This can be attributed to the fact that the mouldable ear piece sealed the ear canal and isolated it from the environment, resulting in a detectable change in pressure. In conclusion, our work suggests that detecting behaviors such as eating, grinding, reading with a semi-occluded ear is possible, whereas, behaviors such as clenching require the complete occlusion of the ear if the activity should be easily detectable. Nevertheless, the latter approach may limit real-world applicability because it hinders the hearing capabilities.</p
    corecore