Inverse Kinematics of Robot Manipulators with Multiple Moving Control Points

Author(s):  
Agostino De Santis ◽  
Bruno Siciliano
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (24) ◽  
pp. 5461
Author(s):  
Yuhan Chen ◽  
Xiao Luo ◽  
Baoling Han ◽  
Yan Jia ◽  
Guanhao Liang ◽  
...  

The inverse kinematics of robot manipulators is a crucial problem with respect to automatically controlling robots. In this work, a Newton-improved cyclic coordinate descent (NICCD) method is proposed, which is suitable for robots with revolute or prismatic joints with degrees of freedom of any arbitrary number. Firstly, the inverse kinematics problem is transformed into the objective function optimization problem, which is based on the least-squares form of the angle error and the position error expressed by the product-of-exponentials formula. Thereafter, the optimization problem is solved by combining Newton’s method with the improved cyclic coordinate descent (ICCD) method. The difference between the proposed ICCD method and the traditional cyclic coordinate descent method is that consecutive prismatic joints and consecutive parallel revolute joints are treated as a whole in the former for the purposes of optimization. The ICCD algorithm has a convenient iterative formula for these two cases. In order to illustrate the performance of the NICCD method, its simulation results are compared with the well-known Newton–Raphson method using six different robot manipulators. The results suggest that, overall, the NICCD method is effective, accurate, robust, and generalizable. Moreover, it has advantages for the inverse kinematics calculations of continuous trajectories.


2008 ◽  
Vol 594 ◽  
pp. 415-436
Author(s):  
Yuan Ming Cheng ◽  
Chien Hsun Kuo ◽  
Jih Hua Chin

Parallel mechanisms could be hardly used in contour tracking because of their mechanism features. This study proposed a link-space real time contour tracking for a 3 DOF (Z、α and β) hydraulic parallel mechanism. The essence of this approach is to convert control points of command trajectory to link space by inverse kinematics. A real-time interpolator was created and the multi-axis cross-coupled pre-compensation control (MCCPM) was constructed for link-space contour tracking. It was shown that a contour-accurate trajectory tracking could be performed which was impossible in the original Z-α-β space. Other advantages of this link-space approach were time efficiency and the uniform tracking velocity.


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