Abstract

Traditional industrial robots often face challenges in achieving a perfectly polished surface on a workpiece because of their high mechanical rigidity. The active compliance force control device installed at the robotic arm’s end enables high-precision contact force control between the grinding tool and the workpiece. However, the complex hysteresis nonlinearity between cylinder air pressure and output force, as well as various random disturbances during the grinding process, can affect the accuracy of the contact force and potentially impact the grinding effect of the workpiece, even causing irreversible damage to the surface of the workpiece. Given the complex random variation of cylinder output force in the actual grinding process, a rate-dependent hysteresis model based on diagonal recurrent neural network and Pradtl–Ishlinskii models named dRNN-PI is designed to compensate for the complex nonlinear hysteresis of the cylinder and calculate the desired air pressure to maintain a steady contact force on the workpiece. The proxy-based sliding mode control (PSMC) is utilized to quickly track the desired air pressure without overshooting. This paper also proves the controller’s stability using the Lyapunov-based methods. Finally, the accuracy of the proposed hysteresis compensation model and the effectiveness and robustness of the PSMC are verified by experiment results.

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