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Definition of an Industrial Robot A robot is a re-programmable multifunctional manipulator designed to move material, parts, tools, or specialized devices through variable programmed motions for the performance of a variety of tasks. Robot Institute of America (Group within Society of Manufacturing Engineers) Components of Industrial Robot Mechanical structure or manipulator Actuator Sensors Control system Modeling and Control of Manipulators Modeling • Kinematics • Differential kinematics • Dynamics Modeling and Control of Manipulators Control • Trajectory planning • Motion control • Hardware/software architecture Mechanical Components Robots are serial “chain” mechanisms made • • “links” (generally considered to be rigid), and “joints” (where relative motion takes place) Joints connect two links • • Prismatic revolute “Degrees of Freedom” Degrees of freedom (DoF) is the number of in Ideally, each joint has exactly one degree of fr • degrees of freedom = number of joints Industrial robots typically have 6 DoF, but 3, 4 Mechanical Configurations Industrial robots are categorized by the first three joint types Five different robot configurations: • • • • • Cartesian (or Rectangular), Cylindrical, Spherical (or Polar), Jointed (or Revolute), and SCARA Kinematics Position and Orientation of a Rigid Body 3-D Homogeneous Transformations Coordinate transformation (translation+rotation) 3-D Homogeneous Transformations Homogeneous vector Homogeneous transformation matrix 3-D Homogeneous Transformations Composition of coordinate transformations Euler Angles Minimal representation of orientation Three parameters are sufficient Euler Angles [ ] Two successive rotations are not made about parallel axes How many kinds of Euler angles are there? Kinematics Aim of Direct Kinematics Compute the position and orientation of the end effector as a function of the joint variables Direct Kinematics The direct kinematics function is expressed by the homogeneous transformation matrix Open Chain rtenberg Convention Operational Space Description of end-effector task position: coordinates (easy) w.r.t base frame orientation: (n s a) (difficult) Function of time Operational space Independent variables Joint space Prismatic: d Revolute: theta Redundancy Definition A manipulator is termed kinematically redundant when it has a number of degrees of mobility which is greater than the number of variables that are necessary to describe a given task. e Kinematics e Kinematics we know the desired “world” or “base” coordinates for we need to compute the set of joint coordinates that w the inverse kinematics problem is much more difficult se Kinematics there is no general purpose technique that will guaran Multiple solutions may exist Infinite solutions may exist, e.g., in the case of redund There might be no admissible solutions (condition: x i Differential Kinematics and Statics Differential Kinematics Find the relationship between the joint velocities and the end-effector linear and angular velocities. Linear velocity Angular velocity i for a revolute joint qi di for a prismatic joint Jacobian Computation The contribution of single joint i to the end-effector linear velocity J P1 J Pi J Pn v q1 q i q n J O1 J Oi J On The contribution of single joint i to the end-effector angular velocity Jacobian Computation Kinematic Singularities The Jacobian is, in general, a function of the configuration q; those configurations at which J is rank-deficient are termed Kinematic singularities. Reasons to Find Singularities Singularities represent configurations at which mobility of the structure is reduced Infinite solutions to the inverse kinematics problem may exist In the neighborhood of a singularity, small velocities in the operational space may cause large velocities in the joint space Dynamics Dynamics relationship between the joint actuator torques and the motion of the structure Derivation of dynamic model of a manipulator Simulation of motion Design of control algorithms Analysis of manipulator structures Method based on Lagrange formulation Lagrange Formulation Generalized coordinates n variables which describe the link positions of an n-degree-of-mobility manipulator The Lagrange of the mechanical system Lagrange Formulation The Lagrange’s equations Generalized force Given by the nonconservative force Joint actuator torques, joint friction torques, joint torques induced by interaction with environment Computation of Kinetic Energy Consider a manipulator with n rigid links Kinetic energy of link i Kinetic energy of the motor actuating link i Kinetic Energy of Link Express the kinetic energy as a function of the generalized coordinates of the system, that are the joint variables Computation of Potential Energy Consider a manipulator with n rigid links Joint Space Dynamic Model Viscous friction torques Coulomb friction torques Actuation torques Force and moment exerted on the environment Multi-input-multi-output; Strong coupling; Nonlinearity Direct Dynamics and Inverse Dynamics Direct dynamics: Given joint torques and initial joint position and velocity, determine joint acceleration Useful for simulation Inverse dynamics: Given joint position, velocity and acceleration, determine joint torques Useful for trajectory planning and control algorithm implementation Trajectory Planning Trajectory Planning Goal: to generate the reference inputs to the motion control system which ensures that the manipulator executes the planned trajectory torques Trajectory planning system Motion control system Robot Position, velocity, acceleration Joint Space Trajectory Trajectory parameters in operation space Initial and final end-effector location, traveling time, etc. Inverse kinematics algorithm Trajectory parameters in joint space Trajectory planning algorithm Joint (end-effector) trajectories in terms of position, velocity and acceleration Point-to-point Motion Polynomial interpolation q(t ) a n t a n1 t n n 1 a1t a0 Trapezoidal velocity profile Motion Control Motion Control Determine the time history of the generalized forces to be developed by the joint actuators so as to guarantee execution of the commanded task while satisfying given transient and steadystate requirements The Control Problem Joint space control problem Open loop Independent Joint Control Regard the manipulator as formed by n independent systems (n joints) control each joint as a SISO system treat coupling effects as disturbance Independent Joint Control Assuming that the actuator is a rotary dc motor Position and Velocity Feedback