Development of an underwater robot arm capable of measuring of joint-torque based on hall sensors

Author(s):  
Taisei MIYAZAKI ◽  
Norimitsu SAKAGAMI ◽  
Sadao KAWAMURA
Author(s):  
K. Kosuge ◽  
H. Takeuchi ◽  
K. Furuta

Robotica ◽  
1992 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 497-508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sharon A. Stansfield

SUMMARYIn this paper we present a series of haptic exploratory procedures, or EPs, implemented for a multi-fingered, articulated, sensate robot hand. These EPs are designed to extract specific tactile and kinesthetic information from an object via their purposive invocation by an intelligent robotic system. Taken together, they form an active robotic touch perception system to be used both in extracting information about the environment for internal representation and in acquiring grasps for manipulation. The theory and structure of this robotic haptic system is based upon models of human haptic exploration and information processing.The haptic system presented utilizes an integrated robotic system consisting of a PUMA 560 robot arm, a JPL/Stanford robot hand, with joint torque sensing in the fingers, a wrist force/torque sensor, and a 256 element, spatially-resolved fingertip tactile array. We describe the EPs implemented for this system and provide experimental results which illustrate how they function and how the information which they extract may be used. In addition to the sensate hand and arm, the robot also contains structured-lighting vision and a Prolog-based reasoning system capable of grasp generation and object categorization. We present a set of simple tasks which show how both grasping and recognition may be enhanced by the addition of active touch perception.


Author(s):  
Jillian C. Cochran ◽  
Jimin Hong ◽  
Aaron M. Dollar

As the role of robotics continues to expand beyond highly structured manufacturing applications to other domains, including medical and service applications, safe operation in the presence of people is becoming increasingly important. Many existing safety systems rely on fragile and sophisticated joint torque sensors and control models that greatly add to the expense and complexity of the robot system. This paper presents the “Fusion Clutch”, a mechanical system for decoupling high-impedance actuators from the output, such as a robot arm, in the event of a collision. In its nominal configuration, the clutch couples the transmission to the output via a spring-loaded bi-stable mechanism that is able to quickly decouple the two in the event of a collision with very low activation force. After the actuator is disengaged, the clutch also applies a brake to the output that prevents it from falling under the force of gravity but allows the operator to still reposition it. This prevents a robot arm from pinning the operator after the mechanism had been activated. Experimental results validate the small force required to activate the mechanism, along with a substantial decrease in force impulse during impact.


2007 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 44-46
Author(s):  
Motomu Nakashima ◽  
Akemi Takahashi
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (03) ◽  
pp. 1430002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Said G. Khan ◽  
Guido Herrmann ◽  
Alexander Lenz ◽  
Mubarak Al Grafi ◽  
Tony Pipe ◽  
...  

Compliance control is highly relevant to human safety in human–robot interaction (HRI). This paper presents multi-dimensional compliance control of a humanoid robot arm. A dynamic model-free adaptive controller with an anti-windup compensator is implemented on four degrees of freedom (DOF) of a humanoid robot arm. The paper is aimed to compliment the associated review paper on compliance control. This is a model reference adaptive compliance scheme which employs end-effector forces (measured via joint torque sensors) as a feedback. The robot's body-own torques are separated from external torques via a simple but effective algorithm. In addition, an experiment of physical human robot interaction is conducted employing the above mentioned adaptive compliance control along with a speech interface. The experiment is focused on passing an object (a cup) between a human and a robot. Compliance is providing an immediate layer of safety for this HRI scenario by avoiding pushing, pulling or clamping and minimizing the effect of collisions with the environment.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document