3 research outputs found
Novel observers for compensation of communication delay in bilateral control systems
The problem of communication delay in bilateral or
teleoperation systems is even more emphasized with the use of the
internet for communication, which may give rise to loss of
transparency and even instability. To address the problem,
numerous methods have been proposed. This study is among the
few recent studies taking a disturbance observer approach to the
problem of time delay, and introduces a novel sliding-mode
observer to overcome specifically the effects of communication
delay in the feedback loop. The observer operates in combination
with a PD+ controller which controls the system dynamics, while
also compensating load torque uncertainties on the slave side. To
this aim, an EKF based load estimation algorithm is performed on
the slave side. The performance of this approach is tested with
computer simulations for the teleoperation of a 1-DOF robotic
arm. The simulations reveal an acceptable amount of accuracy
and transparency between the estimated slave and actual slave
position under both constant and random measurement delay and
variable and step-type load variations on the slave side,
motivating the use of the approach for internet-based bilateral
control systems
Sliding mode and EKF observers for communication delay compensation in bilateral control systems
To address the problem of internet based communication delay in bilateral control systems, numerous methods have been proposed. This study is among the few recent studies taking a disturbance observer approach to the problem of
time delay, and introduces a sliding-mode (SM) observer to overcome specifically the effects of communication delay in the feedback loop. The observer operates in combination with a PD+ controller which controls the system dynamics, while also compensating load torque uncertainties on the slave side. To this aim, an EKF based load estimation algorithm is performed on the slave side. The performance of this approach is tested with computer simulations for the teleoperation of a 1-DOF robotic arm. Experimental results are also presented to test the performance of the approach under constant and random measurement and control input delay for no load
Experimental evaluation of sliding mode and EKF observers for network delay compensation in bilateral control
Network delays in the feedback and control loop can give rise to loss of transparency and instability in teleoperation and bilateral control systems, especially with the use of the internet as the medium of communication. This is a current problem of bilateral control, with numerous approaches taken to improve the performance in the face of network delay. This study is based on the more recent approach of taking communication delay effects into account as disturbance, and addressing the problem via the design of a disturbance observer. To this aim, a novel sliding-mode observer (SMO) and an EKF observer are developed and tested for improved performance in bilateral position control systems. The SMO runs on the master side and estimates the slave position using delayed measurement feedback from the slave side. The estimated feedback is used in a PD controller, also running on the master side, the output of which is sent to the slave through the internet as control input for trajectory tracking dynamics. As another contribution to bilateral control, in this study, an extended Kalman Filter (EKF) is also developed to estimate the variable load changes on the slave side, which are further compensated by a “plus” term added on the slave side to the PD control input sent by the master. The designed SM and EKF based bilateral control approach is tested with experiments conducted on a slave system comprising a single link arm under gravitational load. For added challenge, the system is tested for bi-directional load and reference trajectory variations and for both constant and random measurement and control input delays of 1-2 seconds in all cases. The experiment results demonstrate that the designed SM and EKF based observers perform very well under no control input delay, and well- known slave parameters and initial conditions. The developed system performs reasonably well with bi-directional load and reference variations under parameter uncertainties, and definitely maintains stability even under simultaneous random measurement and control delays of 1-2 seconds, which is considerably more than the considered delays in current literature