Dynamic trot-walking with the hydraulic quadruped robot — HyQ: Analytical trajectory generation and active compliance control

Author(s):  
Barkan Ugurlu ◽  
Ioannis Havoutis ◽  
Claudio Semini ◽  
Darwin G. Caldwell
IEEE Access ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 163449-163460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zisen Hua ◽  
Xuewen Rong ◽  
Yibin Li ◽  
Hui Chai ◽  
Shuaishuai Zhang

Author(s):  
Zhu Rui ◽  
Yang Qingjun ◽  
Song Jiaxing ◽  
Yang Shangru ◽  
Liu Yudong ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 144-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Barkan Ugurlu ◽  
Hironori Oshima ◽  
Emre Sariyildiz ◽  
Tatsuo Narikiyo ◽  
Jan Babic

Author(s):  
Jun Huang ◽  
Duc Truong Pham ◽  
Yongjing Wang ◽  
Mo Qu ◽  
Chunqian Ji ◽  
...  

Human–robot collaborative disassembly is an approach designed to mitigate the effects of uncertainties associated with the condition of end-of-life products returned for remanufacturing. This flexible semi-autonomous approach can also handle unpredictability in the frequency and numbers of such returns as well as variance in the remanufacturing process. This article focusses on disassembly, which is the first and arguably the most critical step in remanufacturing. The article presents a new method for disassembling press-fitted components using human–robot collaboration based on the active compliance provided by a collaborative robot. The article first introduces the concepts of human–robot collaborative disassembly and outlines the method of active compliance control. It then details a case study designed to demonstrate the proposed method. The study involved the disassembly of an automotive water pump by a collaborative industrial robot working with a human operator to take apart components that had been press-fitted together. The results show the feasibility of the proposed method.


Author(s):  
Edward H. Currie ◽  
Y. M Zhao ◽  
Louis Kavoussi ◽  
Sina Y. Rabbany

Author(s):  
Binrui Wang ◽  
Jiqing Huang ◽  
Guoyang Shen ◽  
Dijian Chen

Purpose Active compliance control is the key technology for Tri-Co robots (coexisting–cooperative–cognitive robots) to interact with the environment and people. This study aims to make the robot arm shake hands compliantly with people; the paper proposed two closed-loop-compliant control schemes for the dynamic identification of cascade elbow joint. Design/methodology/approach The active compliance control strategy consists of inner and outer loops. The inner loop is the position control using sliding mode control with disturbance observer (SMCDO), in which a new saturation function is designed to replace the traditional signal function of sliding mode control (SMC) law so as to mitigate chatter. The outer loop is the admittance control to regulate the dynamic behaviours of the elbow joint, i.e. its impedance. The simulation is carried out to verify the performance of the proposed control scheme. Findings The results show that the chatter of traditional SMC can be effectively eliminated by using SMCDO with this saturation function. In addition, for the handshake task, the value of threshold force and elbow joint compliance is defined. Then, the threshold force tests, impact tests and elbow-joint compliance tests are carried out. The results show that, in the impedance model, the elbow joint compliance only depends on the stiffness parameters, not on the position control loop. Practical implications The effectiveness of the admittance control based on SMCDO can improve the adaptability of industrial manipulator in different working environments to some degree. Originality/value The admittance control with SMCDO completed trajectory tracking has higher accuracy than that based on SMC.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 284-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guoteng Zhang ◽  
Xuewen Rong ◽  
Chai Hui ◽  
Yibin Li ◽  
Bin Li

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