Abstract

The lack of aerial physical interaction capability is one of the choke points limiting the extension of aerial robot applications, such as rescue missions and aerial maintenance. We present a new aerial robotic manipulator (AEROM) for aerial dexterous operations in this work. It contains a robotic manipulator with 6-degree-of-freedom and a compact flight platform. Firstly, we propose a quantitative capability index to evaluate and guide the mechanical design of the AEROM. Based on the proposed quantitative index, we construct a lightweight bird-inspired manipulator to imitate a raptor hindlimb. An additional telescopic joint and an end-effector consisting of three soft fingers allow the AEROM to execute aerial interaction tasks. In addition, the wrist joints enable independent control of the end-effector attitude regardless of the flight platform. After explicitly analyzing the multi-source disturbances during the aerial operation tasks, we develop a refined anti-disturbance controller to compensate for the disturbances with different characteristics. The proposed controller further improves the position accuracy of end-effector to enable dexterous operations during aerial interaction tasks. Finally, the physical experiments verify the effectiveness of the proposed AEROM system.

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