227 research outputs found

    On-the-Fly Workspace Visualization for Redundant Manipulators

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    This thesis explores the possibilities of on-line workspace rendering for redundant robotic manipulators via parallelized computation on the graphics card. Several visualization schemes for different workspace types are devised, implemented and evaluated. Possible applications are visual support for the operation of manipulators, fast workspace analyses in time-critical scenarios and interactive workspace exploration for design and comparison of robots and tools

    Workspace and singularity determination of a 7-DoF wrist-partitioned serial manipulator towards graffiti painting

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    Els robots estan sent utilitzats, cada cop més, en la realització de tasques en la indústria. Molts d'ells també són dissenyats pensats per a realitzar les tasques de la llar. En general, els robots són dissenyats per a facilitar el dia a dia del éssers humans. Però quan es tracta d'obres artístiques, és menys comú trobar-se robots realitzant-les. Nosaltres pretenem sortir de la norma mitjançant l'ús d'un robot per a pintar un grafiti. La motivació per a aconseguir-ho convergeix en la formulació de dues preguntes: "Quin és el volum de treball d'un robot, quan l'orientació del seu efector final està fixada?" i "Donat un pla arbitrari, quina és la major àrea de treball lliure de singularitats en aquest?" Aquesta tesi proposa un mètode per a l'obtenció de les singularitats de posició en un pla qualsevol d'un manipulador serial amb un canell esfèric. El mètode s'ha obtingut mitjançant la combinació d'un mètode de determinació de singularitats de posició, el qual està basat en una tècnica per al decoplat de manipuladors que presenten un canell esfèric, i un algorisme branch-and-prune per a la resolució de sistemes d'equacions. S'ha obtingut el volum de treball d'un manipulador serial de 7 graus de llibertat a través d'un enfocament de cinemàtica directa. Es presenta una metodologia per a obtenir el volum de treball del manipulador serial quan el seu efector final té l'orientació constant i s'aplica per a obtenir aproximacions per al cas de certes orientacions. Es mostra com les singularitats poden ser analitades a través de separar-les en singularitats de posició i d'orientació. el mètode proposat formula i resol les equacions que determinen les singularitats de posició. Pel que fa a les singularitats d'orientació, es mostra que poden ser evitades sense perdre una quantitat significant de volum de treball, des del punt de vista de la posició.Los robots estén siendo utilizados, cada vez más, en la realización de tareas en la industria. Muchos de ellos también son diseñados pensados para realizar las tareas del hogar. En general, los robots son diseñados para facilitar el día a día de los seres humanos. Pero cuando se trata de obras artíticas, es menos común encontrarse a robots realizándolas. Nosotros pretendemos salirnos de lo común mediante el uso de un robot para pintar un grafiti. La motivación por lograrlo converge en la formulación de dos preguntas: "¿Cuál es el volumen de trabajo de un robot, cuando la orientación de su efector final está fijada?" y "Dado un plano arbitrario, ¿cuál es la mayor área de trabajo libre de singularidades en éste?" Esta tesis propone un método para la obtención de las singularidades de posición en un plano cualquiera de un manipulador serial con una muñeca esférica. El método ha sido obtenido mediante la combinación de un método de determinación de singularidades de posición, el cual está basado en una técnica para el decoplado de manipuladores que presentan una muñeca esférica, y un algoritmo branch-and-prune para la resolución de sistemas de ecuaciones. Se ha obtenido el volumen de trabajo de un manipulador serial de 7 grados de libertad a través de un enfoque de cinemática directa. Se presenta la metodología para obtener el volumen de trabajo del manipulador serial cuando su efector final tiene una orientación constante y se aplica para obtener aproximaciones para el caso de ciertas orientaciones. Se muestra cómo las singularidades pueden ser analizadas a través de separarlas en singularidades de posición y de orientación. El método propuesto formula y resuelve las ecuaciones que determinan las singularidades de posición. En cuanto a las singularidades de orientación, se muestra que pueden ser evitadas sin perder una cantidad significante de volumen de trabajo, desde el punto de vista de la posición.Robots are overtaking every day more tasks in the industry. A lot of them are even designed for performing household chores. In general, robots are designed to facilitate the day-to-day of human beings. But when it comes to artistic tasks, it is less usual to see robots performing them. We pretend to stay out of the crowd by using a robot to paint a graffiti. The motivation to achieve this task converges into the statement of two questions: "What is the workspace of a robot, when the orientation of its end-effector is fixed?" and "For a given plane, what is the largest singularity free surface on it?". This thesis proposes a method for the computation of the position singularities of a wrist-partitioned serial manipulator for a given plane. The method is obtained from the combination of a position singularity determination method, which is based on the decoupling technique of a wrist-partitioned manipulator, and a branch-and-prune algorithm for the resolution of systems of equations. The workspace of a 7-DoF serial manipulator is obtained by a forward kinematics approach. A methodology to obtain the constant orientation workspace of a serial manipulator is presented and applied to get approximations for some specific orientations. It is shown how singularities can be analyzed by decoupling them into position singularities and orientation singularities. The proposed method formulates and solves the equation that determines the position singularities. In the case of the orientation singularities, it is shown that they can be avoided without losing a significant amount of the workspace's volume, from the point of view of the position.Outgoin

    Kinematic Characterisation of Hexapods for Industry

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    International audiencePurpose-The aim of this paper is to propose two simple tools for the kinematic characterization of hexapods. The paper also aims to share the authors' experience with converting a popular commercial motion base (Stewart-Gough platform, hex-apod) to an industrial robot for use in heavy duty aerospace manufacturing processes. Design/methodology/approach-The complete workspace of a hexapod is a six-dimensional entity that is impossible to visualize. Thus, nearly all hexapod manufacturers simply state the extrema of each of the six dimensions, which is very misleading. As a compromise, we propose a special three-dimensional subset of the complete workspace, an approximation of which can be readily obtained using a CAD/CAM software suite, such as CATIA. While calibration techniques for serial robots are readily available, there is still no generally-agreed procedure for calibrating hexapods. We propose a simple calibration method that relies on the use of a laser tracker and requires no programming at all. Instead, the design parameters of the hexapod are directly and individually measured and the few computations involved are performed in a CAD/CAM software such as CATIA. Findings-The conventional octahedral hexapod design has a very limited workspace, though free of singularities. There are important deviations between the actual and the specified kinematic model in a commercial motion base. Practical implications-A commercial motion base can be used as a precision positioning device with its controller retrofit-ted with state-of-the-art motion control technology with accurate workspace and geometric characteristics. Originality/value-A novel geometric approach for obtaining meaningful measures of the workspace is proposed. A novel, systematic procedure for the calibration of a hexapod is outlined. Finally, experimental results are presented and discussed

    Parallel manipulators: practical applications and kinematic design criteria. Towards the modular reconfigurable robots

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    Post-PrintModern robotic manipulators play an essential role in industry, developing several tasks in an easy way, enhancing the accuracy of the final product and reducing the executing time. Also they can be found in other fields as aerospace industry, several medical applications, gaming industry, and so on. In particular, the parallel manipulators have acquired a great relevance in the last years. Indeed, many research activities and projects deal with the study and develop-ment of this type of robots. Nevertheless, usually, a bilateral communication between industry and research does not exist, even among the different existing research areas. This causes a lack of knowledge regarding works that have been carried out, the ones that are under devel-opment and the possible future investigations. Hence, once a specific field of knowledge has acquired a certain level of maturity, it is convenient to reflect its current state of the art. In this sense, the authors of this paper present a review of the different fields in which parallel ma-nipulators have a significant participation, and also the most active research topics in the anal-ysis and design of these robots. Besides, several contributions of the authors to this field are cited.The authors wish to acknowledge the financial support received from the Spanish Government through the "Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad" (Project DPI2015-67626-P (MINECO/FEDER, UE)), the financial support from the Uni-versity of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU) under the program UFI 11/29 and the support to the research group, through the project with ref. IT949-16, given by the "Departamento de Educación, Política Lingüística y Cultura" of the Regional Government of the Basque Country

    Development and Characterization of Velocity Workspaces for the Human Knee.

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    The knee joint is the most complex joint in the human body. A complete understanding of the physical behavior of the joint is essential for the prevention of injury and efficient treatment of infirmities of the knee. A kinematic model of the human knee including bone surfaces and four major ligaments was studied using techniques pioneered in robotic workspace analysis. The objective of this work was to develop and test methods for determining displacement and velocity workspaces for the model and investigate these workspaces. Data were collected from several sources using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT). Geometric data, including surface representations and ligament lengths and insertions, were extracted from the images to construct the kinematic model. Fixed orientation displacement workspaces for the tibia relative to the femur were computed using ANSI C programs and visualized using commercial personal computer graphics packages. Interpreting the constraints at a point on the fixed orientation displacement workspace, a corresponding velocity workspace was computed based on extended screw theory, implemented using MATLAB(TM), and visually interpreted by depicting basis elements. With the available data and immediate application of the displacement workspace analysis to clinical settings, fixed orientation displacement workspaces were found to hold the most promise. Significant findings of the velocity workspace analysis include the characterization of the velocity workspaces depending on the interaction of the underlying two-systems of the constraint set, an indication of the contributions from passive constraints to force closure of the joint, computational means to find potentially harmful motions within the model, and realistic motions predicted from solely geometric constraints. Geometric algebra was also investigated as an alternative method of representing the underlying mathematics of the computations with promising results. Recommendations for improving and continuing the research may be divided into three areas: the evolution of the knee model to allow a representation for cartilage and the menisci to be used in the workspace analysis, the integration of kinematic data with the workspace analysis, and the development of in vivo data collection methods to foster validation of the techniques outlined in this dissertation

    Constrained Motion Planning System for MRI-Guided, Needle-Based, Robotic Interventions

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    In needle-based surgical interventions, accurate alignment and insertion of the tool is paramount for providing proper treatment at a target site while minimizing healthy tissue damage. While manually-aligned interventions are well-established, robotics platforms promise to reduce procedure time, increase precision, and improve patient comfort and survival rates. Conducting interventions in an MRI scanner can provide real-time, closed-loop feedback for a robotics platform, improving its accuracy, yet the tight environment potentially impairs motion, and perceiving this limitation when planning a procedure can be challenging. This project developed a surgical workflow and software system for evaluating the workspace and planning the motions of a robotics platform within the confines of an MRI scanner. 3D Slicer, a medical imaging visualization and processing platform, provided a familiar and intuitive interface for operators to quickly plan procedures with the robotics platform over OpenIGTLink. Robotics tools such as ROS and MoveIt! were utilized to analyze the workspace of the robot within the patient and formulate the motion planning solution for positioning of the robot during surgical procedures. For this study, a 7 DOF robot arm designed for ultrasonic ablation of brain tumors was the targeted platform. The realized system successfully yielded prototype capabilities on the neurobot for conducting workspace analysis and motion planning, integrated systems using OpenIGTLink, provided an opportunity to evaluate current software packages, and informed future work towards production-grade medical software for MRI-guided, needle-based robotic interventions

    Parallel Manipulators

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    In recent years, parallel kinematics mechanisms have attracted a lot of attention from the academic and industrial communities due to potential applications not only as robot manipulators but also as machine tools. Generally, the criteria used to compare the performance of traditional serial robots and parallel robots are the workspace, the ratio between the payload and the robot mass, accuracy, and dynamic behaviour. In addition to the reduced coupling effect between joints, parallel robots bring the benefits of much higher payload-robot mass ratios, superior accuracy and greater stiffness; qualities which lead to better dynamic performance. The main drawback with parallel robots is the relatively small workspace. A great deal of research on parallel robots has been carried out worldwide, and a large number of parallel mechanism systems have been built for various applications, such as remote handling, machine tools, medical robots, simulators, micro-robots, and humanoid robots. This book opens a window to exceptional research and development work on parallel mechanisms contributed by authors from around the world. Through this window the reader can get a good view of current parallel robot research and applications

    Learning of Generalized Manipulation Strategies in Service Robotics

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    This thesis makes a contribution to autonomous robotic manipulation. The core is a novel constraint-based representation of manipulation tasks suitable for flexible online motion planning. Interactive learning from natural human demonstrations is combined with parallelized optimization to enable efficient learning of complex manipulation tasks with limited training data. Prior planning results are encoded automatically into the model to reduce planning time and solve the correspondence problem

    Robot Manipulators

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    Robot manipulators are developing more in the direction of industrial robots than of human workers. Recently, the applications of robot manipulators are spreading their focus, for example Da Vinci as a medical robot, ASIMO as a humanoid robot and so on. There are many research topics within the field of robot manipulators, e.g. motion planning, cooperation with a human, and fusion with external sensors like vision, haptic and force, etc. Moreover, these include both technical problems in the industry and theoretical problems in the academic fields. This book is a collection of papers presenting the latest research issues from around the world
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