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Experiments in contact control

H. Seraji, Robert Steele

Year
1996
Citations
25

Abstract

This article describes the implementation, experimentation, and application of contact control schemes for a 7-DOF Robotics Research arm. The contact forces and torques are measured in the sensor frame by the 6-axis force/torque sensor mounted at the wrist, are compensated for gravity, and then are transformed to the tool frame in which the contact task is defined and executed. The contact control schemes are implemented on the existing robot Cartesian position control system at 400Hz, do not require force rate information, and are extremely simple and computationally fast. Three types of contact control schemes are presented: compliance control, force control, and dual-mode control. In the compliance control scheme, the contact force is fed back through a lag-plus-feedforward compliance controller so that the end-effector behaves like a spring with adjustable stiffness; thus the contact force can be controlled by the reference position command. In the force control scheme, a force setpoint is used as the command input and a proportional-plus-integral force controller is employed to ensure that the contact force tracks the force setpoint accurately. In the dual-mode control scheme, the end-effector approaches and impacts the reaction surface in compliance mode, and the control scheme is then switched automatically to force mode after the initial contact has been established. Experimental results are presented to demonstrate contact with hard and soft surfaces under the three proposed control schemes. The article is concluded with the application of the proposed schemes to perform a contact-based eddy-current inspection task. In this task, the robot first approaches the inspection surface in compliance control until it feels that it has touched the surface, and then automatically levels the end-effector on the surface. The robot control system then transitions to force control and applies the desired force on the surface while executing a scanning motion. At the completion of the inspection task, the robot first relaxes the applied force and then retracts from the surface. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Keywords

SetpointControl theory (sociology)Contact forceController (irrigation)EngineeringTorqueControl engineeringRobotRoboticsControl system

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