DocumentCode
580814
Title
A truly safely moving robot has to know what injury it may cause
Author
Haddadin, Sami ; Haddadin, Simon ; Khoury, Augusto ; Rokahr, Tim ; Parusel, Sven ; Burgkart, Rainer ; Bicchi, Antonio ; Albu-Schäffer, Alin
Author_Institution
Robot. & Mechatron. Center, DLR - German Aerosp. Center, Wessling, Germany
fYear
2012
fDate
7-12 Oct. 2012
Firstpage
5406
Lastpage
5413
Abstract
Enabling robots to safely interact with humans is an essential goal of robotics research. The developments achieved over the last years in mechanical design and control made it possible to have active cooperation between humans and robots in rather complex situations. In these terms, safe behavior of the robot even under worst-case situations is crucial and forms also a basis for higher level decisional aspects. In order to quantify what safe behavior really means, the definition of injury, as well as understanding its general dynamics are essential. This insight can then be applied to design and control robots such that injury due to robot-human impacts is explicitly taken into account. In this paper we approach the problem from a medical injury analysis point of view in order to formulate the relation between robot mass, velocity, impact geometry, and resulting injury qualified in medical terms. We transform these insights into processable representations and propose a motion supervisor that utilizes injury knowledge for generating safe robot motions. The algorithm takes into account the reflected inertia, velocity, and geometry at possible impact locations. The proposed framework forms a basis for generating truly safe velocity bounds that explicitely consider the dynamic properties of the manipulator and human injury.
Keywords
control engineering computing; geometry; human-robot interaction; injuries; mobile robots; motion control; safety; velocity control; dynamic properties; human injury; human-robot interaction; impact geometry; impact location; inertia; injury knowledge; manipulator; mechanical design; medical injury analysis; motion supervisor; moving robot; robot control; robot design; robot mass; robot safe behavior; robot-human impact; safe robot motion; velocity; Collision avoidance; Humans; Injuries; Muscles; Robots; Safety; Skin;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS), 2012 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on
Conference_Location
Vilamoura
ISSN
2153-0858
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-1737-5
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IROS.2012.6386163
Filename
6386163
Link To Document