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  1. Abstract

    Collaborative robots must simultaneously be safe enough to operate in close proximity to human operators and powerful enough to assist users in industrial tasks such as lifting heavy equipment. The requirement for safety necessitates that collaborative robots are designed with low-powered actuators. However, some industrial tasks may require the robot to have high payload capacity and/or long reach. For collaborative robot designs to be successful, they must find ways of addressing these conflicting design requirements. One promising strategy for navigating this tradeoff is through the use of static balancing mechanisms to offset the robot’s self-weight, thus enabling the selection of low-powered actuators. In this paper, we introduce a novel, two degrees-of-freedom static balancing mechanism based on spring-loaded, wire-wrapped cams. We also present an optimization-based cam design method that guarantees the cams stay convex, ensures the springs stay below their extensions limits, and minimizes sensitivity to unmodeled deviations from the nominal spring constant. Additionally, we present a model of the effect of friction between the wire and the cam. Lastly, we show experimentally that the torque generated by the cam mechanism matches the torque predicted in our modeling approach. Our results also suggest that the effects of wire-cam friction are significant for non-circular cams.

     
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available February 1, 2025
  2. Abstract

    Balancing parallel robots throughout their workspace while avoiding the use of balancing masses and respecting design practicality constraints is difficult. Medical robots demand such compact and lightweight designs. This paper considers the difficult task of achieving optimal approximate balancing of a parallel robot throughout a desired task-based dexterous workspace using balancing springs only. While it is possible to achieve perfect balancing in a path, only approximate balancing may be achieved without the addition of balancing masses. Design considerations for optimal robot base placement and the effects of placement of torsional balancing springs are presented. Using a modal representation for the balancing torque requirements, we use recent results on the design of wire-wrapped cam mechanisms to achieve balancing throughout a task-based workspace. A simulation study shows that robot base placement can have a detrimental effect on the attainability of a practical design solution for static balancing. We also show that optimal balancing using torsional springs is best achieved when all springs are at the actuated joints and that the wire-wrapped cam design can significantly improve the performance of static balancing. The methodology presented in this paper provides practical design solutions that yield simple, lightweight and compact designs suitable for medical applications where such traits are paramount.

     
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  3. Continuum robots suffer large deflections due to internal and external forces. Accurate modeling of their passive compliance is necessary for accurate environmental interaction, especially in scenarios where direct force sensing is not practical. This paper focuses on deriving analytic formulations for the compliance of continuum robots that can be modeled as Kirchhoff rods. Compared to prior works, the approach presented herein is not subject to the constant-curvature assumptions to derive the configuration space compliance, and we do not rely on computationally-expensive finite difference approximations to obtain the task space compliance. Using modal approximations over curvature space and Lie group integration, we obtain closed-form expressions for the task and configuration space compliance matrices of continuum robots, thereby bridging the gap between constant-curvature analytic formulations of configuration space compliance and variable curvature task space compliance. We first present an analytic expression for the compliance of aingle Kirchhoff rod.We then extend this formulation for computing both the task space and configuration space compliance of a tendon-actuated continuum robot. We then use our formulation to study the tradeoffs between computation cost and modeling accuracy as well as the loss in accuracy from neglecting the Jacobian derivative term in the compliance model. Finally, we experimentally validate the model on a tendon-actuated continuum segment, demonstrating the model’s ability to predict passive deflections with error below 11.5% percent of total arc length. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 1, 2024
  4. Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2024
  5. Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 29, 2024
  6. Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 29, 2024
  7. null (Ed.)
    Choosing a kinematic model for a continuum robot typically involves making a tradeoff between accuracy and computational complexity. One common modeling approach is to use the Cosserat rod equations, which have been shown to be accurate for many types of continuum robots. This approach, however, still presents significant computational cost, particularly when many Cosserat rods are coupled via kinematic constraints. In this work, we propose a numerical method that combines orthogonal collocation on the local rod curvature and forward integration of the Cosserat rod kinematic equations via the Magnus expansion, allowing the equilibrium shape to be written as a product of matrix exponentials. We provide a bound on the maximum step size to guarantee convergence of the Magnus expansion for the case of Cosserat rods, compare in simulation against other approaches, and demonstrate the tradeoffs between speed and accuracy for the fourth and sixth order Magnus expansions as well as for different numbers of collocation points. Our results show that the proposed method can find accurate solutions to the Cosserat rod equations and can potentially be competitive in computation speed. 
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  8. Collaborative robots should ideally use low torque actuators for passive safety reasons. However, some applications require these collaborative robots to reach deep into confined spaces while assisting a human operator in physically demanding tasks. In this paper, we consider the use of in-situ collaborative robots (ISCRs) that balance the conflicting demands of passive safety dictating low torque actuation and the need to reach into deep confined spaces. We consider the judicious use of bracing as a possible solution to these conflicting demands and present a modeling framework that takes into account the constrained kinematics and the effect of bracing on the endeffector compliance. We then define a redundancy resolution framework that minimizes the directional compliance of the end-effector while maximizing end-effector dexterity. Kinematic simulation results show that the redundancy resolution strategy successfully decreases compliance and improves kinematic conditioning while satisfying the constraints imposed by the bracing task. Applications of this modeling framework can support future research on the choice of bracing locations and support the formation of an admittance control framework for collaborative control of ISCRs under bracing constraints. Such robots can benefit workers in the future by reducing the physiological burdens that contribute to musculoskeletal injury. 
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  9. Parallel robots have been primarily investigated as po- tential mechanisms with stiffness modulation capabilities through the use of actuation redundancy to change internal preload. This paper investigates real-time stiffness modula- tion through the combined use of kinematic redundancy and variable stiffness actuators. A known notion of directional stiffness is used to guide the real-time geometric reconfig- uration of a parallel robot and command changes in joint- level stiffness. A weighted gradient-projection redundancy resolution approach is demonstrated for resolving kinematic redundancy while satisfying the desired directional stiffness and avoiding singularity and collision between the legs of a Gough/Stewart parallel robot with movable anchor points at its base and with variable stiffness actuators. A simulation study is carried out to delineate the effects of using kinematic redundancy with or without the use of variable stiffness ac- tuators. In addition, modulation of the entire stiffness matrix is demonstrated as an extension of the approach for modulating directional stiffness. 
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