Abstract

Robot arms used for service applications require safe human–machine interactions; therefore, the control gain of such robot arms must be minimized to limit the force output during operation, which slows the response of the control system. To improve cost efficiency, low-resolution sensors can be used to reduce cost because the robot arms do not require high precision of position sensing. However, low-resolution sensors slow the response of closed-loop control systems, leading to low accuracy. Focusing on safety and cost reduction, this study proposed a low-gain, sensorless Brushless DC motor control architecture, which performed position and torque control using only Hall-effect sensors and a current sensor. Low-pass filters were added in servo controllers to solve the sensing problems of undersampling and noise. To improve the control system’s excessively slow response, we added a dynamic force compensator in the current controllers, simplified the system model, and conducted tuning experiments to expedite the calculation of dynamic force. These approaches achieved real-time current compensation, and accelerated control response and accuracy. Finally, a seven-axis robot arm was used in our experiments and analyses to verify the effectiveness of the simplified dynamic force compensators. Specifically, these experiments examined whether the sensorless drivers and compensators could achieve the required response and accuracy while reducing the control system’s cost.

Highlights

  • Industrial robots have been developed for decades and have served as a solution for the two automation insufficiencies: Quality uniformity and labor force

  • 1 kHz, and the controllers must be equipped with a Real-Time Operating System (RTOS) and real-time higher than 1 kHz, and the controllers be could equipped with a Real-Time communication to avoid system delays,must which cause discontinuity and further delays

  • Through open-loop current compensation, we solved the servo controllers’ delay problem caused by an insufficient number of sensors and the problems of insufficient force and slow response caused by low-gain control

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Summary

A Sensorless and Low-Gain Brushless DC Motor

Shih-Hsiang Yen 1 , Pei-Chong Tang 2 , Yuan-Chiu Lin 2 and Chyi-Yeu Lin 1,3,4, *. Taiwan Building Technology Center, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Center for Cyber-Physical System, National Taiwan University of Science and Technology, Taipei 106, Taiwan

Introduction
Sensorless
Embedded
Low-Speed
Simplified Robot Dynamic Compensator
Robot Dynamic Model
Simplified Robot Dynamic Model
Dynamic
Simplified Dynamic Force Compensator Design
Simplified Dynamic Force Compensator Tuning
Simplifying the Calculations of Moment of Inertia and Gravity Torque
Tuning Experiment with SDFC
50 SDFC provided the and the black line represents the
Analysis of Phase Compensation
Real-Time System Framework
RTOS–Xenomai
Real-Time Communication
Real-Time Program Architecture
Experiment and Results
Joint Position Accuracy Analysis
Experiment 1
Experiment 2
Results of experiment
Compensator Efficiency Analysis
Conclusions

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