Statically Balanced Compliant Mechanisms (SBCM’S): An Example and Prospects

Author(s):  
Just L. Herder ◽  
Fred P. A. van den Berg

Abstract In some applications of compliant mechanisms, the fact that energy is stored in the elastic members presents a problem. For instance, in manually operated instruments, such as surgical forceps, the operating force should preferably be proportional to the gripping force, while forces introduced by the bending of elastic elements would disturb this force transmission process. To restore the force transmission quality, compliant mechanisms may be statically balanced, resulting in statically balanced compliant mechanisms (SBCM’s). This paper presents an example of a compliant surgical forceps mechanism, which is statically balanced by a low-friction rolling-link compensation mechanism. Force feedback is restored to the extent that the pulse in an artificial artery can be perceived clearly.

Author(s):  
Albert J. van der Pijl ◽  
Just L. Herder

Abstract In minimally invasive surgery, surgeons are deprived of direct contact with the patient’s tissue. All manipulation, including diagnostic palpation, is carried out via long and slender instruments, inserted through small trocars inserted in the skin. Due to poor mechanical characteristics, such as internal friction, backlash, and non-linear force transmission functions, current instruments allow only marginal force feedback. Consequently, surgeons lack a major source of vital information, resulting in reduced safety and grasping forces far greater than necessary. Previous research lead to the design of a 10mm-trocar grasper with low friction and an outstanding force transmission characteristic. The present study was conducted to develop this prototype into a clinically applicable instrument which can be used in 5mm-trocar therapy, by redesigning the mechanism while maintaining the excellent mechanical characteristics. This resulted in a clinical prototype, still according the patented rolling link design but in a different embodiment, now also matching the additional specifications. Mechanical testing showed that the mechanical efficiency of the 5mm-trocar version is as high as in the original version. The 5-mm-version will now be used for further optimization and clinical testing.


Author(s):  
Aa¨ron Stapel ◽  
Just L. Herder

Compliant mechanisms have many advantages over their rigid-body counterparts. One disadvantage however is the fact that motion of the mechanism is associated with elastic energy storage in the compliant parts. This is a problem especially in cases where accurate force transmission is of primary concern, such as in medical graspers. A solution to this problem is to statically balance the elastic forces by the addition of a spring force compensation mechanism, such that the effect of the compliance is neutralized. The complete resulting mechanisms resulting from this concept are called statically balanced compliant mechanisms (SBCMs). This paper presents a feasibility study into the design of a grasper for medical purposes and demonstrates that the concept is possible and practically viable. It is shown that the compliant gripper of a laparoscopic forceps can be statically balanced with a single-piece compliant compensation mechanism, with a balancing error of only 0.03N while dimensions are such that the compensation part of the mechanism can be stored inside the hand grip of the instrument.


Author(s):  
Ditske J. B. A. de Lange ◽  
Matthijs Langelaar ◽  
Just L. Herder

This paper presents the design of a grasping instrument for minimally invasive surgery. Due to its small dimensions a compliant mechanism seems promising. To obtain force feedback, the positive stiffness of the compliant grasper must be statically balanced by a negative-stiffness compensation mechanism. For the design of compliant mechanisms, topology optimization can be used. The goal of this paper is to investigate the applicability of topology optimization to the design of a compliant laparoscopic grasper and particularly a compliant negative-stiffness compensation mechanism. In this study, the problem is subdivided in the grasper part and the compensation part. In the grasper part the deflection at the tip of the grasper is optimized. This results in a design that has a virtually linear force-displacement characteristic that forms the input for the compensation part. In the compensation part the difference between the force-displacement characteristic of the grasper part and the characteristic of the compensation part is minimized. An optimization problem is formulated enabling a pre-stress to be incorporated, which is required to obtain the negative stiffness in the compensation part. We can conclude that topology optimization is a promising approach in the field of statically balanced compliant mechanism design, even though there is great scope improvement of the method.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 169-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Chen ◽  
S. Zhang

Abstract. The purpose of this paper is to present new concepts for designing fully-compliant statically-balanced mechanisms without prestressing assembly. A statically-balanced compliant mechanism can ideally provide zero stiffness and energy free motion like a traditional rigid-body mechanism. These characteristics are important in design of compliant mechanisms where low actuation force, accurate force transmission or high-fidelity force feedback are primary concerns. Typically, static balancing of compliant mechanisms has been achieved by means of prestressing assembly. However, this can often lead to creep and stress relaxation arising in the flexible members. In this paper two concepts are presented which eliminate the need for prestressing assembly of compliant mechanisms: (1) a weight compensator which employs a constant-force compliant mechanism, (2) a near-zero-stiffness mechanism which combines two multistable mechanisms. In addition to the advantages provided by statically-balanced compliant mechanisms, two other notable features of these statically-balanced mechanisms are their ability to be monolithically fabricated and to return to their as-fabricated position without any disassembly when not in use.


2011 ◽  
Vol 133 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacob R. Montierth ◽  
Robert H. Todd ◽  
Larry L. Howell

This paper presents elliptical rolling contact joints in compression as an alternative to circular rolling contact and conventional revolute joints where high quality force transmission—low friction and backlash—with variable output are desired. Parameters specific to the joint and its position are defined in terms of relative link angles and elliptical surface geometry. These relationships allow elliptical rolling contact joints to be incorporated in vector loop summations used in kinematic analysis. Notably, elliptical rolling contact is developed as the more general case of which circular rolling contact is a subset. Elliptical rolling contact joints are shown to offer several benefits over circular rolling contact, including reduced Hertz contact stresses, variable output velocity, maximum use of contact interface by distributing small rotations across surfaces of small curvature, reduced forces on constraining members, and no-slip pure rolling provided by either connecting links or flexures, without the need for gear teeth or friction.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (23) ◽  
pp. 5157
Author(s):  
Hiroki Yokota ◽  
Takeshi Yoneyama ◽  
Tetsuyou Watanabe ◽  
Yasuo Sasagawa ◽  
Mitsutoshi Nakada

Avoiding unnecessary bleeding during neuroendoscopic surgeries is crucial because achieving hemostasis in a narrow operating space is challenging. However, when the location of a blood vessel in a tumor cannot be visually confirmed, unintentional damage to the vessel and subsequent bleeding may occur. This study proposes a method for tumor blood vessel detection using a master–slave surgical robot system equipped with a force sensor in the slave gripper. Using this method, blood pulsation inside a tumor was detected, displayed as a gripping force wave, via the slave force sensor. The characteristics of gripping force due to blood pulsation were extracted by measuring the fluctuation of the force in real time. The presence or absence of blood vessels was determined on the basis of cross-correlation coefficients between the gripping force fluctuation waveform due to blood pulsation and model fluctuation waveform. Experimental validation using two types of simulated tumors (soft: E = 6 kPa; hard: E = 38 kPa) and a simulated blood vessel (E = 1.9 MPa, radius = 0.5 mm, thickness = 0.1 mm) revealed that the presence of blood vessels could be detected while gripping at a constant angle and during transient gripping.


1993 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haruhisa Kawasaki ◽  
◽  
Takahiro Hayashi

This paper presents a new force feedback glove for manipulation of virtual objects. The glove is comprised of wire, link, servo motor, force sensor, and joint angle sensor of fingers. These devices are mounted to the back of glove. The object grasping sense is generated by the force feedback control of the servo motor. We show the force transmission characteristics of the glove and the experimental results of recognition of the difference in rigidity of object.


Author(s):  
Brian Trease ◽  
Sridhar Kota

The basic premise of a compliant system is the integration of motion/force transmission via elastic deformation with embedded actuation and sensing. Current electromechanical systems are generally fashioned in the rigid-and-discrete paradigm where one first designs a rigid structure with mechanical joints and then adds actuators and sensors, with the design of controls only following as an afterthought. The objective of this research is a systems approach to synthesis of mechanism, structure, actuation, and sensing, thereby advancing from traditional mechanical design to automated compliant system design. In previous studies of compliant mechanisms and their synthesis, single-actuator mechanisms have primarily been considered, with the determination of the actuator’s type, orientation, size, and location occurring outside of the automated design synthesis, at the designer’s option. A new algorithmic framework is presented, in which structural topology and actuator/sensor placement are simultaneously synthesized for adaptive performance. Significantly, this is not a traditional ad hoc method; sensor and actuator placement affect structural topology and vice versa. This is a continuation of our previously reported actuation-placement work [1–2], updated here to include the sensor placement co-synthesis and new tasks in addition to shape change. The methods used include genetic algorithms, graph searches for connectivity, and multiple load cases implemented with linear finite element analysis. Fundamental metrics for the inclusion of embedded components in a multifunctional compliant system are developed and investigated. The essential framework for the integration of controls with compliant mechanisms is established. Specifically, the concepts of controllability and observability, as redefined for compliant systems, are proven as a successful starting point for the design of multifunctional, adaptive systems. These concepts refer to the unique system response for each component (actuator or sensor) it contains. Results are presented for several problems, focusing on the application of shape-morphing aircraft structures. Through examples and design studies, the metrics and the methodology demonstrate that multiple, optimally-placed components indeed offer performance benefits for mechanical systems, in terms of multifunctional execution. Finally, the extension of controllability to address the problem of single-point multidegree-of-freedom manipulation is performed to show the generalized use of the new methodology in benefitting the design of compliant systems.


Micromachines ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 1141
Author(s):  
Yang Yang ◽  
Kaixiang Jin ◽  
Honghui Zhu ◽  
Gongfei Song ◽  
Haojian Lu ◽  
...  

Soft robotic grippers are able to carry out many tasks that traditional rigid-bodied grippers cannot perform but often have many limitations in terms of control and feedback. In this study, a Fin Ray effect inspired soft robotic gripper is proposed with its whole body directly 3D printed using soft material without the need of assembly. As a result, the soft gripper has a light weight, simple structure, is enabled with high compliance and conformability, and is able to grasp objects with arbitrary geometry. A force sensor is embedded in the inner side of the gripper, which allows the contact force required to grip the object to be measured in order to guarantee successful grasping and to provide the most suitable gripping force. In addition, it enables control and data monitoring of the gripper’s operating state at all times. Characterization and grasping demonstration of the gripper are given in the Experiment section. Results show that the gripper can be used in a wide range of scenarios and applications, such as the service robot and food industry.


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