Abstract

As a direct response to robot movements and load distributions, the ground reaction force (GRF) is pivotal for heavy-legged robot (HLR) applications. This study presents a technical framework for GRF monitoring in an electric cylinder-driven HLR, eliminating the need for information on body motion, load distributions, and measured servo outputs. Traditional joint space-based dynamics are extended to include servo currents, compensating for the influence of unknown servo outputs. An essential contribution is incorporating the impact of floating bases and unknown loads into a virtual spatial force (VSF) applied to the HLR hip joint. The VSF is obtained through the nonlinear disturbance observer when the HLR is in a stable contact phase. Subsequently, a high-order GRF observer (HOGO), compensated with VSF, enables GRF observations without the pre-acquired body movement and load distribution data. In contrast to conventional GRF observations, the proposed framework could determine virtual payloads acting on the hip joint while ensuring precise GRF monitoring without requiring supplementary sensors. The GRF observations of the proposed framework are experimentally superior to those of the conventional methods with unknown HLR body motion and load information.

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