Title :
Gait phase-based smoothed sliding mode control for a rotary series elastic actuator installed on the knee joint
Author :
Joonbum Bae ; Kyoungchul Kong ; Tomizuka, M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Mech. Eng., Univ. of California, Berkeley, CA, USA
fDate :
June 30 2010-July 2 2010
Abstract :
Actuators for physical human-robot interaction (pHRI), such as series elastic actuators, should generate the desired torque precisely. However, the resistive and inertia loads inherent in the actuators (e.g., friction, damping, and inertia) set challenges in the control of actuators in a force (torque) mode. The resistive factors include nonlinear effects and should be considered in the controller design to generate the desired force accurately. Moreover, the uncertainties in the plant dynamics make the precise torque control difficult. In this paper, nonlinear control algorithms are exploited for a rotary series elastic actuator to generate the desired torque precisely in the presence of nonlinear resistive factors and modeling uncertainty. The sliding mode control smoothed by a boundary layer is applied to enhance the robustness for the modeling uncertainty without chattering phenomenon. In this paper, the rotary series elastic actuator (RSEA) is installed on the knee joint of an orthosis, and the thickness of the boundary layer is changed by gait phases in order to minimize the torque error without the chattering phenomenon. The performance of the proposed controller is verified by experiments with actual walking motions.
Keywords :
actuators; control system synthesis; force control; human-robot interaction; nonlinear control systems; orthotics; torque control; variable structure systems; controller design; force mode; gait phase-based smoothed sliding mode control; inertia loads; knee joint; nonlinear control algorithms; nonlinear effects; nonlinear resistive factors; orthosis; physical human-robot interaction; resistive loads; rotary series elastic actuator; torque control; Damping; Force control; Friction; Knee; Motion control; Pneumatic actuators; Robust control; Sliding mode control; Torque control; Uncertainty;
Conference_Titel :
American Control Conference (ACC), 2010
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7426-4
DOI :
10.1109/ACC.2010.5531282