Abstract
ABSTRACT In recent years, a great amount of research on physical human–robot interaction has been conducted, and mainly concentrated on safety issues to minimize the risk of accidents to the operator during the cooperation between human and robot. Unfortunately, the identification of inertia and damping matrices in the dynamic admittance model is time-consuming, which is still an open problem of previous admittance controllers. Additionally, the natural cooperation is that cooperative movements are implemented in every degree of freedom in space, which is rarely concerned while it is important to implement more complex cooperative movements, and to help operator feels naturally during the cooperation. This paper presents an alternative admittance controller based on inference mechanism of fuzzy logic to eliminate the identification of inertia and damping matrices during the process of controller formulation in which the end-effector’s velocity is adaptively adjusted via external wrench (force/torque measured by a sensor mounted on end-effector) and power transmitted by the robot. Moreover, the proposed controller also considers end-effector’s full DOF to guarantee the natural human–robot interaction. The fuzzy-admittance controller is evaluated by an experimental set-up of teaching task using 6-DOF manipulator in which manipulator moves passively via the human impact on real-time force/torque sensor mounted on end-effector.
Published Version
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