1,171 research outputs found
Momentum Control of Humanoid Robots with Series Elastic Actuators
Humanoid robots may require a degree of compliance at the joint level for
improving efficiency, shock tolerance, and safe interaction with humans. The
presence of joint elasticity, however, complexifies the design of balancing and
walking controllers. This paper proposes a control framework for extending
momentum based controllers developed for stiff actuators to the case of series
elastic actuators. The key point is to consider the motor velocities as an
intermediate control input, and then apply high-gain control to stabilise the
desired motor velocities achieving momentum control. Simulations carried out on
a model of the robot iCub verify the soundness of the proposed approach
Automatic Gain Tuning of a Momentum Based Balancing Controller for Humanoid Robots
This paper proposes a technique for automatic gain tuning of a momentum based
balancing controller for humanoid robots. The controller ensures the
stabilization of the centroidal dynamics and the associated zero dynamics.
Then, the closed-loop, constrained joint space dynamics is linearized and the
controller's gains are chosen so as to obtain desired properties of the
linearized system. Symmetry and positive definiteness constraints of gain
matrices are enforced by proposing a tracker for symmetric positive definite
matrices. Simulation results are carried out on the humanoid robot iCub.Comment: Accepted at IEEE-RAS International Conference on Humanoid Robots
(HUMANOIDS). 201
Torque-Controlled Stepping-Strategy Push Recovery: Design and Implementation on the iCub Humanoid Robot
One of the challenges for the robotics community is to deploy robots which
can reliably operate in real world scenarios together with humans. A crucial
requirement for legged robots is the capability to properly balance on their
feet, rejecting external disturbances. iCub is a state-of-the-art humanoid
robot which has only recently started to balance on its feet. While the current
balancing controller has proved successful in various scenarios, it still
misses the capability to properly react to strong pushes by taking steps. This
paper goes in this direction. It proposes and implements a control strategy
based on the Capture Point concept [1]. Instead of relying on position control,
like most of Capture Point related approaches, the proposed strategy generates
references for the momentum-based torque controller already implemented on the
iCub, thus extending its capabilities to react to external disturbances, while
retaining the advantages of torque control when interacting with the
environment. Experiments in the Gazebo simulator and on the iCub humanoid robot
validate the proposed strategy
Momentum Control with Hierarchical Inverse Dynamics on a Torque-Controlled Humanoid
Hierarchical inverse dynamics based on cascades of quadratic programs have
been proposed for the control of legged robots. They have important benefits
but to the best of our knowledge have never been implemented on a torque
controlled humanoid where model inaccuracies, sensor noise and real-time
computation requirements can be problematic. Using a reformulation of existing
algorithms, we propose a simplification of the problem that allows to achieve
real-time control. Momentum-based control is integrated in the task hierarchy
and a LQR design approach is used to compute the desired associated closed-loop
behavior and improve performance. Extensive experiments on various balancing
and tracking tasks show very robust performance in the face of unknown
disturbances, even when the humanoid is standing on one foot. Our results
demonstrate that hierarchical inverse dynamics together with momentum control
can be efficiently used for feedback control under real robot conditions.Comment: 21 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables in Autonomous Robots (2015
Integration of vertical COM motion and angular momentum in an extended Capture Point tracking controller for bipedal walking
In this paper, we demonstrate methods for bipedal walking control based on the Capture Point (CP) methodology.
In particular, we introduce a method to intuitively derive a CP
reference trajectory from the next three steps and extend the
linear inverted pendulum (LIP) based CP tracking controller
introduced in [1], generalizing it to a model that contains
vertical CoM motions and changes in angular momentum.
Respecting the dynamics of general multibody systems, we
propose a measurement-based compensation of multi-body
effects, which leads to a stable closed-loop dynamics of bipedal walking robots. In addition we propose a ZMP projection method, which prevents the robots feet from tilting and ensures the best feasible CP tracking. The extended CP controller’s performance is validated in OpenHRP3 [2] simulations and compared to the controller proposed in [1]
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