Title :
Telemanipulators with Sensor/Actuator Asymmetries Fail the Robustness Criterion
Author :
Verner, Lawton N. ; Okamura, Allison M.
Author_Institution :
Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore
Abstract :
Force reflection in telemanipulators can be challenging and costly, often prohibitively so. By reducing the number of sensors and actuators used in the telemanipulator and providing the user only partial force feedback, cost and performance concerns can be optimized. While partial force feedback is beneficial practically, it creates a sensor/actuator asymmetry in the device. Robust stability for systems with sensor/actuator asymmetries has not been examined previously. We show that telemanipulators with sensor/actuator asymmetries are not passive and do not satisfy the robustness stability criterion. Thus, they are potentially unstable. Further, we motivate the need for additional stability criterion for telemanipulators that are not passivity-based.
Keywords :
actuators; force feedback; force sensors; man-machine systems; manipulators; robust control; stability criteria; telerobotics; human-robot interaction; partial force feedback; robust stability criterion; sensor/actuator asymmetry; telemanipulator force reflection; Actuators; Force feedback; Force sensors; Master-slave; Mechanical sensors; Reflection; Robot sensing systems; Robust stability; Robustness; Stability criteria;
Conference_Titel :
Haptic interfaces for virtual environment and teleoperator systems, 2008. haptics 2008. symposium on
Conference_Location :
Reno, NE
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-2005-6
DOI :
10.1109/HAPTICS.2008.4479955