8 research outputs found
Compensating Pose Uncertainties Through Appropriate Gripper Finger Cutouts
The gripper finger design is a recurring problem in many robotic grasping platforms used in industry. The task of switching
the gripper configuration to accommodate for a new batch of objects typically requires engineering expertise, and is a lengthy and costly
iterative trial-and-error process. One of the open challenges is the need for the gripper to compensate for uncertainties inherent
to the workcell, e.g. due to errors in calibration, inaccurate pose estimation from the vision system, or object deformation. In this paper,
we present an analysis of gripper uncertainty compensating capabilities in a sample industrial object grasping scenario for a finger that was
designed using an automated simulation-based geometry optimization method (Wolniakowski et al., 2013, 2015). We test the developed
gripper with a set of grasps subjected to structured perturbation in a simulation environment and in the real-world setting. We provide
a comparison of the data obtained by using both of these approaches. We argue that the strong correspondence observed in results
validates the use of dynamic simulation for the gripper finger design and optimization