Abstract
A fully robotized polishing of metallic surfaces may be insufficient in case of parts with complex geometric
shapes, where a manual intervention is still preferable. Within the EU SYMPLEXITY project, we are considering
tasks where manual polishing operations are performed in strict physical Human-Robot Collaboration (HRC)
between a robot holding the part and a human operator equipped with an abrasive tool. During the polishing
task, the robot should firmly keep the workpiece in a prescribed sequence of poses, by monitoring and resisting
to the external forces applied by the operator. However, the user may also wish to change the orientation of the
part mounted on the robot, simply by pushing or pulling the robot body and changing thus its configuration. We
propose a control algorithm that is able to distinguish the external torques acting at the robot joints in two
components, one due to the polishing forces being applied at the end-effector level, the other due to the intentional physical interaction engaged by the human. The latter component is used to reconfigure the manipulator arm and, accordingly, its end-effector orientation. The workpiece position is kept instead fixed, by exploiting the intrinsic redundancy of this subtask. The controller uses a F/T sensor mounted at the robot wrist,
together with our recently developed model-based technique (the residual method) that is able to estimate
online the joint torques due to contact forces/torques applied at any place along the robot structure. In order to
obtain a reliable residual, which is necessary to implement the control algorithm, an accurate robot dynamic
model (including also friction effects at the joints and drive gains) needs to be identified first. The complete
dynamic identification and the proposed control method for the human-robot collaborative polishing task are
illustrated on a 6R UR10 lightweight manipulator mounting an ATI 6D sensor.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 234-247 |
| Journal | Mechatronics |
| Volume | 55 |
| Issue number | 2018 |
| Early online date | 17 Mar 2018 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Nov 2018 |
Bibliographical note
Note: This work was funded by Horizon 2020 Framework Programme and partly supported by the European Commission, within the H2020-FoF-2014 637080 SYMPLEXITY projectKeywords
- Mechanical, aeronautical and manufacturing engineering