Cartesian impedance control of redundant manipulators for human-robot co-manipulation | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

Cartesian impedance control of redundant manipulators for human-robot co-manipulation


Abstract:

This paper addresses the problem of controlling a robot arm executing a cooperative task with a human who guides the robot through direct physical interaction. This probl...Show More

Abstract:

This paper addresses the problem of controlling a robot arm executing a cooperative task with a human who guides the robot through direct physical interaction. This problem is tackled by allowing the end effector to comply according to an impedance control law defined in the Cartesian space. While, in principle, the robot's dynamics can be fully compensated and any impedance behaviour can be imposed by the control, the stability of the coupled human-robot system is not guaranteed for any value of the impedance parameters. Moreover, if the robot is kinematically or functionally redundant, the redundant degrees of freedom play an important role. The idea proposed here is to use redundancy to ensure a decoupled apparent inertia at the end effector. Through an extensive experimental study on a 7-DOF KUKA LWR4 arm, we show that inertial decoupling enables a more flexible choice of the impedance parameters and improves the performance during manual guidance.
Date of Conference: 14-18 September 2014
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 06 November 2014
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Conference Location: Chicago, IL, USA

References

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