DocumentCode
2933151
Title
Modeling Induced Master Motion in Force-Reflecting Teleoperation
Author
Kuchenbecker, Katherine J. ; Niemeyer, Gunter
Author_Institution
Stanford University Telerobotics Lab http://telerobotics.stanford.edu; katherine.kuchenbecker@stanford.edu
fYear
2005
fDate
18-22 April 2005
Firstpage
348
Lastpage
353
Abstract
Providing the user with high-fidelity force feedback has persistently challenged the field of telerobotics. Interaction forces measured at the remote site and displayed to the user cause unintended master device motion. This movement is interpreted as a command for the slave robot and can drive the closed-loop system unstable. This paper builds on a recently proposed approach for achieving stable, high-gain force reflection via cancellation of the master mech anism’s induced motion. Such a strategy hinges on obtaining a good model of the master’s response to force feedback. Herein, we present a thorough modeling approach based on successive isolation of system components, demonstrated on a one-degree-of-freedom testbed. A sixth-order mechanical model, including viscous and Coulomb friction as well as a new method for modeling hysteretic stiffness, describes the testbed’s high-frequency resonant modes. This modeling method’s ability to predict induced master motion should lead to significant improvements in force-reflecting teleoperation via the cancellation approach.
Keywords
force feedback; haptic device; hysteresis modeling; system identification; telerobotics; Fasteners; Force feedback; Force measurement; Friction; Hysteresis; Motion measurement; Reflection; Robots; System testing; Telerobotics; force feedback; haptic device; hysteresis modeling; system identification; telerobotics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation, 2005. ICRA 2005. Proceedings of the 2005 IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8914-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROBOT.2005.1570143
Filename
1570143
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