DocumentCode
3402349
Title
Dexterous telemanipulation with four fingered hand system
Author
Jau, Bruno M.
Author_Institution
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA, USA
Volume
1
fYear
1995
fDate
21-27 May 1995
Firstpage
338
Abstract
The paper briefly describes the semi-anthropomorphic telemanipulation system and discusses the advanced capabilities that were demonstrated in the initial performance evaluation. The system´s terminus devices are anthropomorphic: an exoskeleton sixteen degree of freedom (DOF) glove controller that senses human finger forces and backdrives slave motions to every joint of its four instrumented fingers; and a four fingered sixteen DOF anthropomorphic slave hand-wrist-forearm. The master glove is attached to a non-anthropomorphic six DOF universal force-reflecting hand controller (FRHC). The mechanical forearm is mounted to an industrial robot (PUMA 560), replacing its standard forearm. Active electromechanical compliance (AEC) systems for each finger and the wrist provide adjustable compliance, enabling human-like soft grasping. The system is controlled by a high performance distributed control system. Initial performance evaluations focused on tool handling capabilities and astronaut equivalent task executions. Results reveal that the combination of a fingered hand and active compliance enables unprecedented task executions. But it also became evident that complex manipulations require a dual arm robot
Keywords
distributed control; industrial manipulators; intelligent control; telerobotics; PUMA 560; active compliance; active electromechanical compliance systems; adjustable compliance; anthropomorphic slave hand-wrist-forearm; astronaut equivalent task executions; complex manipulations; dexterous telemanipulation; dual arm robot; exoskeleton sixteen DOF glove controller; four fingered hand system; high performance distributed control system; human finger forces; human-like soft grasping; industrial robot; master glove; mechanical forearm; nonanthropomorphic six DOF universal force-reflecting hand controller; performance evaluation; semi-anthropomorphic telemanipulation system; slave motions; tool handling capabilities; Anthropomorphism; Control systems; Electrical equipment industry; Exoskeletons; Fingers; Force control; Humans; Instruments; Motion control; Service robots;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation, 1995. Proceedings., 1995 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Nagoya
ISSN
1050-4729
Print_ISBN
0-7803-1965-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROBOT.1995.525307
Filename
525307
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