Abstract

Recently, compliance has been considered as one of the key physical properties that a robot should incorporate to be able to physically interact with humans and uncertain environments. Apart from the improved ability of interaction, mechanical robustness and higher safety-related performances, compliance introduces underdamped oscillatory modes and reduces the mechanical natural frequency of the plant to be controlled making its control much more complex than that of conventional stiff actuators. To overcome these drawbacks, some recent works focus on the incorporation of physical damping within compliant actuators. This work presents an analysis for the quantitative evaluation of the effects of physical damping in compliant robotic joints to demonstrate the improvements (dynamic performance, stability, controllability, tracking precision and energy efficiency) which can be gained by incorporating physical damping in such flexible transmission systems. Simulation and experimental results validate that these benefits can effectively be achieved on an existing compliant actuator prototype with variable physical damping.

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