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Home SCIENCE NEWS Bionicengineering

Lightweight space robot with precise control developed

December 3, 2021
in Bionicengineering
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A light space manipulator with high load-to-weight ratio: system development and compliance control

Credit: Space:Science & Technology

Robots are already in space. From landers on the moon to rovers on Mars and more, robots are the perfect candidates for space exploration: they can bear extreme environments while consistently repeating the same tasks in exactly the same way without tiring. Like robots on Earth, they can accomplish both dangerous and mundane jobs, from space walks to polishing a spacecraft’s surface. With space missions increasing in number and expanding in scientific scope, requiring more equipment, there’s a need for a lightweight robotic arm that can manipulate in environments difficult for humans.

However, the control schemes that can move such arms on Earth, where the planes of operation are flat, do not translate to space, where the environment is unpredictable and changeable. To address this issue, researchers in Harbin Institute of Technology’s School of Mechanical Engineering and Automation have developed a robotic arm weighing 9.23 kilograms — about the size of a one-year-old baby — capable of carrying almost a quarter of its own weight, with the ability to adjust its position and speed in real time based on its environment.

They published their results on Sept. 28 in Space: Science & Technology.

“In order to solve the problems of strict restrictions on the mass and size of the manipulator, as well as the high requirements for reliability and safety of the control method in space operation, we developed a light space manipulator and proposed a new control method,” said corresponding author Wenfu Xu, professor in Harbin Institute of Technology’s School of Mechanical Engineering and Automation and State Key Laboratory of Robotics and System.

Such a manipulator needs to exert constant force control when in operation.

“For the constant force control of a plane, the direction of control force is constant, but for a curved surface in an unknown environment, its normal vector is often changed in real time, so the traditional method would fail,” Xu said. “In order to overcome this difficulty, we propose integral adaptive admittance control that can realize real-time correction of the desired position of the end of the manipulator so that it is in full contact and realizes constant force control.”

Compare it to a drawing a line on a piece of paper. When the paper is on a flat desktop, it’s much easier to maintain even pressure across the line. Drawing an identical line on a sheet of paper wrapped around a bouncing ball is much more difficult and requires specific calculations to understand the movement of the ball and how much pressure to exert based on the position of both the pen and the ball.

To keep the force control of the space manipulator constant, the researchers imposed a control method that removes the need for steady-state correction — a key component of control systems in known environments. Steady-state correction applies the potential error to the full movement, which eases problems when the environment is predictable. For example, if the manipulator knows the desk’s surface is rough and strong pressure would cause the paper to rip, it can lighten the pressure of the pen to maintain a constant line. But when the surface is changing and unpredictable, maintaining a constant corrective state results in more errors, since not all corrections apply to all errors.

The researchers tested their control method for the lightweight manipulator and found that, even on an unknown surface, the mechanical arm could adjuster quicker than a traditionally controlled manipulator, resulting in a tracking effect steady enough for practical applications.

“Using the proposed light space manipulator and the integral adaptive admittance control method can solve practical problems on on-orbit servicing, such as space target capturing, on-orbital assemble, orbital repairing and so on,” Xu said.

According to Xu, this work can serve as a reference for the design of light manipulators in the future, while the control approach can be applied to the machining process of robotic surface grinders and polishers.

Contributors include Zhiwei Wu and Yongting Chen, School of Mechanical Engineering and Automation, Harbin Institute of Technology.

The Key Research and Development Program of Guangdong Province (2019B090915001)

and the Basic Research Program of Shenzhen (JSGG20200103103401723, JCYJ20190806142818365 and JCYJ20180507183610564) supported this work.

###

Reference

Authors: Zhiwei Wu,1 Yongting Chen,1 and Wenfu Xu1,2 

Title of original paper: A Light Space Manipulator with High Load-to-Weight Ratio: System Development and Compliance Control

Journal: Space:Science & Technology

DOI: 10.34133/2021/9760520

Affiliations: 

1The School of Mechanical Engineering and Automation, Harbin Institute of Technology, Shenzhen 518055, China

2The State Key Laboratory of Robotics and System, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin 150001, China

About Dr. Wenfu Xu

Dr. Wenfu Xu is currently a professor in Harbin Institute of Technology, Shenzhen. His research interests include space robotics, multi-body system dynamics and redundant manipulator. Based on his research, he has published more than 100 papers, including 60 international journal papers, and over 40 international conference papers from major international journals and conference proceedings in robotics and automation.



Journal

Space Science & Technology

DOI

10.34133/2021/9760520

Method of Research

Computational simulation/modeling

Subject of Research

Not applicable

Article Title

A Light Space Manipulator with High Load-to-Weight Ratio: System Development and Compliance Control

Article Publication Date

28-Sep-2021

COI Statement

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest
regarding the publication of this article.

Tags: controldevelopedLightweightPreciserobotspace
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