24 research outputs found
Safe Supervisory Control of Soft Robot Actuators
Although soft robots show safer interactions with their environment than
traditional robots, soft mechanisms and actuators still have significant
potential for damage or degradation particularly during unmodeled contact. This
article introduces a feedback strategy for safe soft actuator operation during
control of a soft robot. To do so, a supervisory controller monitors actuator
state and dynamically saturates control inputs to avoid conditions that could
lead to physical damage. We prove that, under certain conditions, the
supervisory controller is stable and verifiably safe. We then demonstrate
completely onboard operation of the supervisory controller using a soft
thermally-actuated robot limb with embedded shape memory alloy (SMA) actuators
and sensing. Tests performed with the supervisor verify its theoretical
properties and show stabilization of the robot limb's pose in free space.
Finally, experiments show that our approach prevents overheating during contact
(including environmental constraints and human contact) or when infeasible
motions are commanded. This supervisory controller, and its ability to be
executed with completely onboard sensing, has the potential to make soft robot
actuators reliable enough for practical use
Design and Evolution of a Modular Tensegrity Robot Platform
NASA Ames Research Center is developing a compliant modular tensegrity robotic platform for planetary exploration. In this paper we present the design and evolution of the platform's main hardware component, an untethered, robust tensegrity strut, with rich sensor feedback and cable actuation. Each strut is a complete robot, and multiple struts can be combined together to form a wide range of complex tensegrity robots. Our current goal for the tensegrity robotic platform is the development of SUPERball, a 6-strut icosahedron underactuated tensegrity robot aimed at dynamic locomotion for planetary exploration rovers and landers, but the aim is for the modular strut to enable a wide range of tensegrity morphologies. SUPERball is a second generation prototype, evolving from the tensegrity robot ReCTeR, which is also a modular, lightweight, highly compliant 6-strut tensegrity robot that was used to validate our physics based NASA Tensegrity Robot Toolkit (NTRT) simulator. Many hardware design parameters of the SUPERball were driven by locomotion results obtained in our validated simulator. These evolutionary explorations helped constrain motor torque and speed parameters, along with strut and string stress. As construction of the hardware has finalized, we have also used the same evolutionary framework to evolve controllers that respect the built hardware parameters
System Design and Locomotion of Superball, an Untethered Tensegrity Robot
The Spherical Underactuated Planetary Exploration Robot ball (SUPERball) is an ongoing project within NASA Ames Research Center's Intelligent Robotics Group and the Dynamic Tensegrity Robotics Lab (DTRL). The current SUPERball is the first full prototype of this tensegrity robot platform, eventually destined for space exploration missions. This work, building on prior published discussions of individual components, presents the fully-constructed robot. Various design improvements are discussed, as well as testing results of the sensors and actuators that illustrate system performance. Basic low-level motor position controls are implemented and validated against sensor data, which show SUPERball to be uniquely suited for highly dynamic state trajectory tracking. Finally, SUPERball is shown in a simple example of locomotion. This implementation of a basic motion primitive shows SUPERball in untethered control
SUPERball: Exploring Tensegrities for Planetary Probes
The Dynamic Tensegrity Robotics Lab (DTRL) at NASA Ames Research Center is developing a compliant and distributed tensegrity robotic platform for planetary exploration. Working in collaboration with Ghent University, the DTRL built an untethered prototype robot, the SUPERball. In this work, multiple issues with the current SUPERball design are addressed, when considering an example mission to Titan. Specifically, engineering requirements for the mission are empirically validated, and the current design is extended under these requirements to meet expanded goals.Survival of impact forces under entry, descent, and landing are verified with a physical experiment performed in collaboration with the University of Idaho. Then, concepts for a fully-actuated redesign of SUPERball are generated, compared, and validated against current engineering requirements. This exploratory work moves the SUPERball project toward an eventual flight-ready design.
Hardware Design and Testing of SUPERball, A Modular Tensegrity Robot
We are developing a system of modular, autonomous "tensegrity end-caps" to enable the rapid exploration of untethered tensegrity robot morphologies and functions. By adopting a self-contained modular approach, different end-caps with various capabilities (such as peak torques, or motor speeds), can be easily combined into new tensegrity robots composed of rods, cables, and actuators of different scale (such as in length, mass, peak loads, etc). As a first step in developing this concept, we are in the process of designing and testing the end-caps for SUPERball (Spherical Underactuated Planetary Exploration Robot), a project at the Dynamic Tensegrity Robotics Lab (DTRL) within NASA Ames's Intelligent Robotics Group. This work discusses the evolving design concepts and test results that have gone into the structural, mechanical, and sensing aspects of SUPERball. This representative tensegrity end-cap design supports robust and repeatable untethered mobility tests of the SUPERball, while providing high force, high displacement actuation, with a low-friction, compliant cabling system
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Design and Control of Compliant Tensegrity Robots Through Simulation and Hardware Validation
To better understand the role of tensegrity structures in biological systems and their application to robotics, the Dynamic Tensegrity Robotics Lab at NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA, has developed and validated two software environments for the analysis, simulation and design of tensegrity robots. These tools, along with new control methodologies and the modular hardware components developed to validate them, are presented as a system for the design of actuated tensegrity structures. As evidenced from their appearance in many biological systems, tensegrity (‘tensile–integrity’) structures have unique physical properties that make them ideal for interaction with uncertain environments. Yet, these characteristics make design and control of bioinspired tensegrity robots extremely challenging. This work presents the progress our tools have made in tackling the design and control challenges of spherical tensegrity structures. We focus on this shape since it lends itself to rolling locomotion. The results of our analyses include multiple novel control approaches for mobility and terrain interaction of spherical tensegrity structures that have been tested in simulation. A hardware prototype of a spherical six-bar tensegrity, the Reservoir Compliant Tensegrity Robot, is used to empirically validate the accuracy of simulation.Keywords: planetary exploration, tensegrity, compliant robotics, soft robotics, central pattern generators, bioinspired locomotio