Design and Analysis of Parallel Mechanism with Linear Drives Located on the Base at Specified Angles

Author(s):  
Y.V. Rodionov ◽  
A.N. Sukhostavskiy ◽  
A.A. Romanov ◽  
A.V. Dukhov ◽  
I.V. Pelin

The article considers a novel parallel mechanism with drives located on the base at different angles to its plane. This arrangement allows performing a relative movement between objects under water or in space (in aggressive environments). The new mechanism topology is compact for transportation and efficient for operation in aggressive environments. Structural synthesis has been performed; the number of degrees of freedom of the output link was calculated. A general approach to solving the inverse kinematics problem of positions is proposed and an example for a kinematic chain is shown. Denavit — Hartenberg matrices are used to solve the problem of positions. The position of the output link described by this matrix is used to represent the points of this link in the base coordinate system. The constraint equations are applied, which are the distances between the points of the base and the output link.

Author(s):  
J. A. Carretero ◽  
M. Nahon ◽  
B. Buckham ◽  
C. M. Gosselin

Abstract This paper presents a kinematic analysis of a three-degree-of-freedom parallel mechanism intended for use as a telescope mirror focussing device. The construction of the mechanism is first described and its forward and inverse kinematics solutions are derived. Because the mechanism has only three degrees of freedom, constraint equations must be generated to describe the inter-relationship between the six Cartesian coordinates which describe the position and orientation of the moving platform. Once these constraints are incorporated into the kinematics model, a constrained Jacobian matrix is obtained. The stiffness and dexterity properties of the mechanism are then determined based on this Jacobian matrix. The mechanism is shown to exhibit desirable properties in the region of its workspace of interest in the telescope focussing application.


2012 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Chin-Hsing Kuo ◽  
Jian S. Dai

A crucial design challenge in minimally invasive surgical (MIS) robots is the provision of a fully decoupled four degrees-of-freedom (4-DOF) remote center-of-motion (RCM) for surgical instruments. In this paper, we present a new parallel manipulator that can generate a 4-DOF RCM over its end-effector and these four DOFs are fully decoupled, i.e., each of them can be independently controlled by one corresponding actuated joint. First, we revisit the remote center-of-motion for MIS robots and introduce a projective displacement representation for coping with this special kinematics. Next, we present the proposed new parallel manipulator structure and study its geometry and motion decouplebility. Accordingly, we solve the inverse kinematics problem by taking the advantage of motion decouplebility. Then, via the screw system approach, we carry out the Jacobian analysis for the manipulator, by which the singular configurations are identified. Finally, we analyze the reachable and collision-free workspaces of the proposed manipulator and conclude the feasibility of this manipulator for the application in minimally invasive surgery.


Robotica ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 263-267 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald L. Huston ◽  
Timothy P. King

SUMMARYThe dynamics of “simple, redundant robots” are developed. A “redundant” robot is a robot whose degrees of freedom are greater than those needed to perform a given kinetmatic task. A “simple” robot is a robot with all joints being revolute joints with axes perpendicular or parallel to the arm segments. A general formulation, and a solution algorithm, for the “inverse kinematics problem” for such systems, is presented. The solution is obtained using orthogonal complement arrays which in turn are obtained from a “zero-eigenvalues” algorithm. The paper concludes with an assertion that this solution, called the “natural dynamics solution,” is optimal in that it requires the least energy to drive the robot.


Author(s):  
J. A. Carretero ◽  
R. P. Podhorodeski ◽  
M. Nahon

Abstract This paper presents a study of the architecture optimization of a three-degree-of-freedom parallel mechanism intended for use as a telescope mirror focussing device. The construction of the mechanism is first described. Since the mechanism has only three degrees of freedom, constraint equations describing the inter-relationship between the six Cartesian coordinates are given. These constraints allow us to define the parasitic motions and, if incorporated into the kinematics model, a constrained Jacobian matrix can be obtained. This Jacobian matrix is then used to define a dexterity measure. The parasitic motions and dexterity are then used as objective functions for the optimizations routines and from which the optimal architectural design parameters are obtained.


Robotics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 66
Author(s):  
Maurizio Ruggiu ◽  
Xianwen Kong

This paper deals with the reconfiguration analysis of a 3-DOF (degrees-of-freedom) parallel manipulator (PM) which belongs to the cylindrical parallel mechanisms family. The PM is composed of a base and a moving platform shaped as equilateral triangles connected by three serial kinematic chains (legs). Two legs are composed of two universal (U) joints connected by a prismatic (P) joint. The third leg is composed of a revolute (R) joint connected to the base, a prismatic joint and universal joint in sequence. A set of constraint equations of the 1-RPU−2-UPU PM is derived and solved in terms of the Euler parameter quaternion (a.k.a. Euler-Rodrigues quaternion) representing the orientation of the moving platform and of the Cartesian coordinates of the reference point on the moving platform. It is found that the PM may undergo either the 3-DOF PPR or the 3-DOF planar operation mode only when the base and the moving platform are identical. The transition configuration between the operation modes is also identified.


Author(s):  
A. Wolf ◽  
S. Amir ◽  
A. B. Mor

In this report we present the second prototype of a 3-degrees-of-freedom active, miniature bone-attached, robotic system. The report focuses on the mechanical structure, workspace analysis and inverse kinematics solution. The robot is capable of preparing the bone cavity for an implant during joint arthroplasty procedures. This system, just as its predecessor is image-free and all planning is performed intraoperatively in the robot coordinate system, eliminating the need for external tracking systems in the OR. Experiments were conducted using the first robot prototype to evaluate its accuracy and the results supported the feasibility of the concept.


Author(s):  
Guofeng Zhou ◽  
Junwoo Kim ◽  
Yong Je Choi

The Jacobian approach to the kinestatic analysis of a planar suspension mechanism has been previously presented. In this paper, the theory is extended to three-dimensional kinestatic analysis by developing a full kinematic model and viewing it as a spatial parallel mechanism. The full kinematic model consists of two pairs of the front (double wishbone) and rear (multi-link) suspension mechanisms together with a newly developed ground-wheel contact model. The motion of each wheel of four suspension mechanisms is represented by the corresponding instantaneous screw at any instant. A vehicle is considered to be a 6-degrees-of-freedom spatial parallel mechanism whose vehicle body is supported by four serial kinematic chains. Each kinematic chain consists of a virtual instantaneous screw joint and a kinematic pair representing ground-wheel contact model. The kinestatic equation of the 6-degrees-of-freedom spatial parallel mechanism is derived in terms of the Jacobian. As an important application, a cornering motion of a vehicle is analysed under the assumption of steady-state cornering. A numerical example is presented to illustrate how to determine the optimal locations of strut springs for the least roll angle in cornering motion using the proposed method.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (7) ◽  
pp. 428-436
Author(s):  
A. K. Tolstosheev ◽  
V. A. Tatarintsev

The work is devoted to improving the reliability and manufacturability of mechatronic machine designs with parallel kinematics by replacing statically indeterminable manipulators with statically determinable mechanisms. A technique is proposed in which the design of statically determinable manipulators of technological mechatronic machines with parallel kinematics is performed by modifying the structure of prototypes and includes three steps: identifying and analyzing redundant links, eliminating redundant links, checking the correctness of eliminating redundant links. To determine the number of degrees of freedom of the mechanism, identify redundant links, and verify the solution, the authors use the proposed methodology for structural analysis of parallel structure mechanisms. In structural analysis, a manipulator is represented by a hierarchical structure and is considered as a parallel connection of elementary mechanisms with an open kinematic chain; as a kinematic chain consisting of leading and driven parts; as a set of links and kinematic pairs; as a kinematic connection of the output link and the rack. The article implements the following techniques for eliminating redundant links: mobility increase in kinematic pairs; introduction of unloading links and passive kinematic pairs to the kinematic chain; exclusion of extra links and pairs from the kinematic chain; increase in mobility in some kinematic pairs simultaneously with the exclusion of other kinematic pairs that have become superfluous. The authors developed several variants of structural schemes of self-aligning manipulators based on the Orthoglide mechanism, which retain the basic functional proper ties of the prototype. To increase the number of self-aligning mechanism diagrams, the redistribution of mobilities and links within the connecting kinematic chain and between connecting kinematic chains is used. The proposed methodics allow to determine the number of degrees of freedom of the mechanism, the number and type of redundant links, eliminate redundant links and, on an alternative basis, build structural diagrams of statically determinable mechanisms of technological mechatronic machines with parallel kinematics.


1985 ◽  
Vol 107 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Neville Hogan

This three-part paper presents an approach to the control of dynamic interaction between a manipulator and its environment. Part I presented the theoretical reasoning behind impedance control. In Part II the implementation of impedance control is considered. A feedback control algorithm for imposing a desired cartesian impedance on the end-point of a nonlinear manipulator is presented. This algorithm completely eliminates the need to solve the “inverse kinematics problem” in robot motion control. The modulation of end-point impedance without using feedback control is also considered, and it is shown that apparently “redundant” actuators and degrees of freedom such as exist in the primate musculoskeletal system may be used to modulate end-point impedance and may play an essential functional role in the control of dynamic interaction.


Robotica ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 123-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Q. Gan ◽  
Eimei Oyama ◽  
Eric M. Rosales ◽  
Huosheng Hu

For robotic manipulators that are redundant or with high degrees of freedom (dof), an analytical solution to the inverse kinematics is very difficult or impossible. Pioneer 2 robotic arm (P2Arm) is a recently developed and widely used 5-dof manipulator. There is no effective solution to its inverse kinematics to date. This paper presents a first complete analytical solution to the inverse kinematics of the P2Arm, which makes it possible to control the arm to any reachable position in an unstructured environment. The strategies developed in this paper could also be useful for solving the inverse kinematics problem of other types of robotic arms.


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