Title :
Manipulator path planning by decomposition: algorithm and analysis
Author :
Hourtash, Arjang ; Tarokh, Mahmoud
Author_Institution :
Simplify Robotics, Inc, Webster, TX, USA
fDate :
12/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Path planning is achieved by a special decomposition of the robot manipulator, an offline preprocessing stage, and a three phase online path planning scheme. The decomposition consists of separating the robot into several chains where a chain is a combination of several consecutive links and joints. Preprocessing is performed by defining a set of postures for each chain and setting up a collision table which re-integrates the chains into the full robot and stores the collision states of various discretized robot configurations with the obstacles. Path planning using a local search is performed independently in joint subspaces associated with robot chains. The paths found for the chains are synthesized to obtain a collision-free path for the robot. This decomposition reduces the exponential growth of computation with robot degrees of freedom (DOF) to that of the much lower chain DOF. As a result, it is possible to achieve short planning times for practical robots operating in three-dimensional work spaces. Analysis of computation time and space of the proposed method are presented. Results supporting the analysis are provided for a large number of path-planning trials with two practical robots operating in relatively cluttered environments
Keywords :
manipulators; motion control; path planning; search problems; cluttered environments; collision states; collision table; collision-free path; consecutive links; discretized robot configurations; exponential growth; joint subspaces; local search; lower chain DOF; manipulator decomposition; manipulator path planning; offline preprocessing stage; path-planning trials; postures; robot degrees of freedom; robot manipulator decomposition; three phase online path planning scheme; three-dimensional work spaces; Actuators; Algorithm design and analysis; Computational modeling; Intelligent systems; Manipulators; Motion planning; Orbital robotics; Path planning; Roads; Robot motion;
Journal_Title :
Robotics and Automation, IEEE Transactions on