750 research outputs found
Robust Cooperative Manipulation without Force/Torque Measurements: Control Design and Experiments
This paper presents two novel control methodologies for the cooperative
manipulation of an object by N robotic agents. Firstly, we design an adaptive
control protocol which employs quaternion feedback for the object orientation
to avoid potential representation singularities. Secondly, we propose a control
protocol that guarantees predefined transient and steady-state performance for
the object trajectory. Both methodologies are decentralized, since the agents
calculate their own signals without communicating with each other, as well as
robust to external disturbances and model uncertainties. Moreover, we consider
that the grasping points are rigid, and avoid the need for force/torque
measurements. Load distribution is also included via a grasp matrix
pseudo-inverse to account for potential differences in the agents' power
capabilities. Finally, simulation and experimental results with two robotic
arms verify the theoretical findings
Development of advanced control schemes for telerobot manipulators
To study space applications of telerobotics, Goddard Space Flight Center (NASA) has recently built a testbed composed mainly of a pair of redundant slave arms having seven degrees of freedom and a master hand controller system. The mathematical developments required for the computerized simulation study and motion control of the slave arms are presented. The slave arm forward kinematic transformation is presented which is derived using the D-H notation and is then reduced to its most simplified form suitable for real-time control applications. The vector cross product method is then applied to obtain the slave arm Jacobian matrix. Using the developed forward kinematic transformation and quaternions representation of the slave arm end-effector orientation, computer simulation is conducted to evaluate the efficiency of the Jacobian in converting joint velocities into Cartesian velocities and to investigate the accuracy of the Jacobian pseudo-inverse for various sampling times. In addition, the equivalence between Cartesian velocities and quaternion is also verified using computer simulation. The motion control of the slave arm is examined. Three control schemes, the joint-space adaptive control scheme, the Cartesian adaptive control scheme, and the hybrid position/force control scheme are proposed for controlling the motion of the slave arm end-effector. Development of the Cartesian adaptive control scheme is presented and some preliminary results of the remaining control schemes are presented and discussed
Control Techniques for Robot Manipulator Systems with Modeling Uncertainties
This dissertation describes the design and implementation of various nonlinear control strategies for robot manipulators whose dynamic or kinematic models are uncertain. Chapter 2 describes the development of an adaptive task-space tracking controller for robot manipulators with uncertainty in the kinematic and dynamic models. The controller is developed based on the unit quaternion representation so that singularities associated with the otherwise commonly used three parameter representations are avoided. Experimental results for a planar application of the Barrett whole arm manipulator (WAM) are provided to illustrate the performance of the developed adaptive controller. The controller developed in Chapter 2 requires the assumption that the manipulator models are linearly parameterizable. However there might be scenarios where the structure of the manipulator dynamic model itself is unknown due to difficulty in modeling. One such example is the continuum or hyper-redundant robot manipulator. These manipulators do not have rigid joints, hence, they are difficult to model and this leads to significant challenges in developing high-performance control algorithms. In Chapter 3, a joint level controller for continuum robots is described which utilizes a neural network feedforward component to compensate for dynamic uncertainties. Experimental results are provided to illustrate that the addition of the neural network feedforward component to the controller provides improved tracking performance. While Chapter\u27s 2 and 3 described two different joint controllers for robot manipulators, in Chapter 4 a controller is developed for the specific task of whole arm grasping using a kinematically redundant robot manipulator. The whole arm grasping control problem is broken down into two steps; first, a kinematic level path planner is designed which facilitates the encoding of both the end-effector position as well as the manipulators self-motion positioning information as a desired trajectory for the manipulator joints. Then, the controller described in Chapter 3, which provides asymptotic tracking of the encoded desired joint trajectory in the presence of dynamic uncertainties is utilized. Experimental results using the Barrett Whole Arm Manipulator are presented to demonstrate the validity of the approach
Task-space dynamic control of underwater robots
This thesis is concerned with the control aspects for underwater tasks performed by
marine robots. The mathematical models of an underwater vehicle and an underwater
vehicle with an onboard manipulator are discussed together with their associated
properties.
The task-space regulation problem for an underwater vehicle is addressed where the
desired target is commonly specified as a point. A new control technique is proposed
where the multiple targets are defined as sub-regions. A fuzzy technique is used to
handle these multiple sub-region criteria effectively. Due to the unknown gravitational
and buoyancy forces, an adaptive term is adopted in the proposed controller.
An extension to a region boundary-based control law is then proposed for an underwater
vehicle to illustrate the flexibility of the region reaching concept. In this novel
controller, a desired target is defined as a boundary instead of a point or region. For a
mapping of the uncertain restoring forces, a least-squares estimation algorithm and the
inverse Jacobian matrix are utilised in the adaptive control law.
To realise a new tracking control concept for a kinematically redundant robot, subregion
tracking control schemes with a sub-tasks objective are developed for a UVMS.
In this concept, the desired objective is specified as a moving sub-region instead of a
trajectory. In addition, due to the system being kinematically redundant, the controller
also enables the use of self-motion of the system to perform sub-tasks (drag
minimisation, obstacle avoidance, manipulability and avoidance of mechanical joint
limits)
Pose consensus based on dual quaternion algebra with application to decentralized formation control of mobile manipulators
This paper presents a solution based on dual quaternion algebra to the
general problem of pose (i.e., position and orientation) consensus for systems
composed of multiple rigid-bodies. The dual quaternion algebra is used to model
the agents' poses and also in the distributed control laws, making the proposed
technique easily applicable to time-varying formation control of general
robotic systems. The proposed pose consensus protocol has guaranteed
convergence when the interaction among the agents is represented by directed
graphs with directed spanning trees, which is a more general result when
compared to the literature on formation control. In order to illustrate the
proposed pose consensus protocol and its extension to the problem of formation
control, we present a numerical simulation with a large number of free-flying
agents and also an application of cooperative manipulation by using real mobile
manipulators
Task space consensus in networks of heterogeneous and uncertain robotic systems with variable time-delays
This work deals with the leader-follower and the leaderless consensus problems in networks of multiple robot manipulators. The robots are non-identical, kinematically different (heterogeneous), and their physical parameters are uncertain. The main contribution of this work is a novel controller that solves the two consensus problems, in the task space, with the following features: it estimates the kinematic and the dynamic physical parameters; it is robust to interconnecting variable-time delays; it employs the singularity-free unit-quaternions to represent the orientation; and, using energy-like functions, the controller synthesis follows a constructive procedure. Simulations using a network with four heterogeneous manipulators illustrate the performance of the proposed controller.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft
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Redesigning the human-robot interface : intuitive teleoperation of anthropomorphic robots
textA novel interface for robotic teleoperation was developed to enable accurate and highly efficient teleoperation of the Industrial Reconfigurable Anthropomorphic Dual-arm (IRAD) system and other robotic systems. In order to achieve a revolutionary increase in operator productivity, the bilateral/master-slave approach must give way to shared autonomy and unilateral control; autonomy must be employed where possible, and appropriate sensory feedback only where autonomy is impossible; and today’s low-information/high feedback model must be replaced by one that emphasizes feedforward precision and minimal corrective feedback. This is emphasized for task spaces outside of the traditional anthropomorphic scale such as mobile manipulation (i.e. large task spaces) and high precision tasks (i.e. very small task spaces). The system is demonstrated using an anthropomorphically dimensioned industrial manipulator working in task spaces from one meter to less than one millimeter, in both simulation and hardware. This thesis discusses the design requirements and philosophy of this interface, provides a summary of prototype teleoperation hardware, simulation environment, test-bed hardware, and experimental results.Mechanical Engineerin
Passivity-Based adaptive bilateral teleoperation control for uncertain manipulators without jerk measurements
In this work, we consider the bilateral teleoperation problem of cooperative robotic systems in a Single-Master Multi-Slave (SM/MS) configuration, which is able to perform load transportation tasks in the presence of parametric uncertainty in the robot kinematic and dynamic models. The teleoperation architecture is based on the two-layer approach placed in a hierarchical structure, whose top and bottom layers are responsible for ensuring the transparency and stability properties respectively. The load transportation problem is tackled by using the formation control approach wherein the desired translational velocity and interaction force are provided to the master robot by the user, while the object is manipulated with a bounded constant force by the slave robots. Firstly, we develop an adaptive kinematic-based control scheme based on a composite adaptation law to solve the cooperative control problem for robots with uncertain kinematics. Secondly, the dynamic adaptive control for cooperative robots is implemented by means of a cascade control strategy, which does not require the measurement of the time derivative of force (which requires jerk measurements). The combination of the Lyapunov stability theory and the passivity formalism are used to establish the stability and convergence property of the closed-loop control system. Simulations and experimental results illustrate the performance and feasibility of the proposed control scheme.No presente trabalho, considera-se o problema de teleoperação bilateral de um sistema robótico cooperativo do tipo single-master e multiple-slaves (SM/MS) capaz de realizar tarefas de transporte de carga na presença de incertezas paramétricas no modelo cinemático e dinâmico dos robôs. A arquitetura de teleoperação está baseada na abordagem de duas camadas em estrutura hierárquica, onde as camadas superior e inferior são responsáveis por assegurar as propriedades de transparência e estabilidade respectivamente. O problema de transporte de carga é formulado usando a abordagem de controle de formação onde a velocidade de translação desejada e a força de interação são fornecidas ao robô mestre pelo operador, enquanto o objeto é manipulado pelos robôs escravos com uma força constante limitada. Primeiramente, desenvolve-se um esquema de controle adaptativo cinemático baseado em uma lei de adaptação composta para solucionar o problema de controle cooperativo de robôs com cinemática incerta. Em seguida, o controle adaptativo dinâmico de robôs cooperativos é implementado por meio de uma estratégia de controle em cascata, que não requer a medição da derivada da força (o qual requer a derivada da aceleração ou jerk). A teoria de estabilidade de Lyapunov e o formalismo de passividade são usados para estabelecer as propriedades de estabilidade e a convergência do sistema de controle em malha-fechada. Resultados de simulações numéricas ilustram o desempenho e viabilidade da estratégia de controle proposta
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