4 research outputs found
Enhancing fluency and productivity in human-robot collaboration through online scaling of dynamic safety zones
Industrial collaborative robotics is promising for manufacturing activities where the presence of a robot alongside a human operator can improve operator’s working conditions, flexibility, and productivity. A collaborative robotic application has to guarantee not only safety of the human operator, but also fluency in the collaboration, as well as performance in terms of productivity and task time. In this paper, we present an approach to enhance fluency and productivity in human-robot collaboration through online scaling of dynamic safety zones. A supervisory controller runs online safety checks between bounding volumes enclosing robot and human to identify possible collision dangers. To optimize the sizes of safety zones enclosing the manipulator, the method minimizes the time of potential stop trajectories considering the robot dynamics and its torque constraints, and leverages the directed speed of the robot parts with respect to the human. Simulations and experimental tests on a seven-degree-of-freedom robotic arm verify the effectiveness of the proposed approach, and collaborative fluency metrics show the benefits of the method with respect to existing approaches
Design of an Elastic Actuation System for a Gait-Assistive Active Orthosis for Incomplete Spinal Cord Injured Subjects
A spinal cord injury severely reduces the quality of life of affected people. Following the injury,
limitations of the ability to move may occur due to the disruption of the motor and sensory functions
of the nervous system depending on the severity of the lesion. An active stance-control
knee-ankle-foot orthosis was developed and tested in earlier works to aid incomplete SCI subjects
by increasing their mobility and independence. This thesis aims at the incorporation of
elastic actuation into the active orthosis to utilise advantages of the compliant system regarding
efficiency and human-robot interaction as well as the reproduction of the phyisological compliance
of the human joints. Therefore, a model-based procedure is adapted to the design of
an elastic actuation system for a gait-assisitve active orthosis. A determination of the optimal
structure and parameters is undertaken via optimisation of models representing compliant actuators
with increasing level of detail. The minimisation of the energy calculated from the positive
amount of power or from the absolute power of the actuator generating one human-like gait cycle
yields an optimal series stiffness, which is similar to the physiological stiffness of the human
knee during the stance phase. Including efficiency factors for components, especially the consideration
of the electric model of an electric motor yields additional information. A human-like
gait cycle contains high torque and low velocities in the stance phase and lower torque combined
with high velocities during the swing. Hence, the efficiency of an electric motor with a gear unit
is only high in one of the phases. This yields a conceptual design of a series elastic actuator with
locking of the actuator position during the stance phase. The locked position combined with the
series compliance allows a reproduction of the characteristics of the human gait cycle during
the stance phase. Unlocking the actuator position for the swing phase enables the selection of
an optimal gear ratio to maximise the recuperable energy. To evaluate the developed concept,
a laboratory specimen based on an electric motor, a harmonic drive gearbox, a torsional series
spring and an electromagnetic brake is designed and appropriate components are selected. A
control strategy, based on impedance control, is investigated and extended with a finite state
machine to activate the locking mechanism. The control scheme and the laboratory specimen
are implemented at a test bench, modelling the foot and shank as a pendulum articulated at the
knee. An identification of parameters yields high and nonlinear friction as a problem of the system,
which reduces the energy efficiency of the system and requires appropriate compensation.
A comparison between direct and elastic actuation shows similar results for both systems at the
test bench, showing that the increased complexity due to the second degree of freedom and
the elastic behaviour of the actuator is treated properly. The final proof of concept requires the
implementation at the active orthosis to emulate uncertainties and variations occurring during
the human gait