INERTIAL PROPERTIES IN ROBOTIC MANIPULATION - AN OBJECT-LEVEL FRAMEWORK

被引:356
作者
KHATIB, O
机构
[1] Robotics Laboratory, Department of Computer Science, Stanford University, Stanford
关键词
31;
D O I
10.1177/027836499501400103
中图分类号
TP24 [机器人技术];
学科分类号
080202 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Consideration of dynamics is critical in the analysis, design, and control of robot systems. This article presents an extensive study of the dynamic properties of several important classes of robotic structures and proposes a number of general dynamic strategies for their coordination and control. This work is a synthesis of both previous and new results developed within the task-oriented operational space formulation. Here we introduce a unifying frame work for the analysis and control of robotic systems, beginning with an analysis of inertial properties based on two models that independently describe the mass and inertial characteristics associated with linear and angular motions. To visualize these properties, we propose a new geometric representation, termed the belted ellipsoid, that displays the magnitudes of the mass/inertial properties directly rather than their, square roots. Our study of serial macro/mini structures is based on two models of redundant mechanisms. The Slr st is a description of the task-level dynamics that results from projecting the system dynamics into operational space. The second is a unique dynamically consistent relationship between end-effector forces and joint torques. It divides control torques at the joint level into two dynamically decoupled vectors: torques that correspond to forces at the end effector and torques that affect only internal motions. The analysis of inertial properties of macro-/mini-manipulator systems reveals another important characteristic: that of reduced effective inertia. We show that the effective mass/inertia of a macro-/mini-manipulator is bounded above by the mass/inertia of the mini-manipulator alone. Because mini structures have a limited range of motion, we also propose a dextrous dynamic coordination strategy to allow, full use of the high mechanical bandwidth of the mini-structures in extended-motion operations. Finally, a study of the dynamics of parallel, multiarm structures reveals an important additive property. The effective mass and inertia of a multiarm system at some operational point are shown to be given by the slim of the effective masses and inertias associated with the object and each arm. Using this property, the multiarm system can be treated as a single augmented object and controlled by the total operational forces applied by the arms. Both the augmented object construct and the dynamically consistent force/torque relationship are extended for the analysis and central of multiarm systems involving redundancy.
引用
收藏
页码:19 / 36
页数:18
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