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Vision sensor based residual vibration suppression strategy of non-deformable object for robot-assisted assembly operation with gripper flexibility

Chetan Jalendra (Centre for Robotics and Intelligent System, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, Pilani, India)
B.K. Rout (Centre for Robotics and Intelligent System, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, Pilani, India)
Amol Marathe (Centre for Robotics and Intelligent System, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Birla Institute of Technology and Science Pilani, Pilani, India)

Industrial Robot

ISSN: 0143-991x

Article publication date: 8 February 2022

Issue publication date: 30 June 2022

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Abstract

Purpose

Industrial robots are extensively deployed to perform repetitive and simple tasks at high speed to reduce production time and improve productivity. In most cases, a compliant gripper is used for assembly tasks such as peg-in-hole assembly. A compliant mechanism in the gripper introduces flexibility that may cause oscillation in the grasped object. Such a flexible gripper–object system can be considered as an under-actuated object held by the gripper and the oscillations can be attributed to transient disturbance of the robot itself. The commercially available robots do not have a control mechanism to reduce such induced vibration. Thus, this paper aims to propose a contactless vision-based approach for vibration suppression which uses a predictive vibrational amplitude error-based second-stage controller.

Design/methodology/approach

The proposed predictive vibrational amplitude error-based second-stage controller is a real-time vibration control strategy that uses predicted error to estimate the second-stage controller output. Based on controller output, input trajectories were estimated for the internal controller of the robot. The control strategy efficiently handles the system delay to execute the control input trajectories when the oscillating object is at an extreme position.

Findings

The present controller works along with the internal controller of the robot without any interruption to suppress the residual vibration of the object. To demonstrate the robustness of the proposed controller, experimental implementation on Asea Brown Boveri make industrial robot (IRB) 1410 robot with a low frame rate camera has been carried out. In this experiment, two objects have been considered that have a low (<2.38 Hz) and high (>2.38 Hz) natural frequency. The proposed controller can suppress 95% of vibration amplitude in less than 3 s and reduce the stability time by 90% for a peg-in-hole assembly task.

Originality/value

The present vibration control strategy uses a camera with a low frame rate (25 fps) and the delays are handled intelligently to favour suppression of high-frequency vibration. The mathematical model and the second-stage controller implemented suppress vibration without modifying the robot dynamical model and the internal controller.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The above research work has been carried out by generous grant awarded by Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), New Delhi, for the fellowship of the research student. The authors are grateful to the officials of BITS Pilani for providing the facilities available at the Center for Robotics and Intelligent Systems (CRIS).

Citation

Jalendra, C., Rout, B.K. and Marathe, A. (2022), "Vision sensor based residual vibration suppression strategy of non-deformable object for robot-assisted assembly operation with gripper flexibility", Industrial Robot, Vol. 49 No. 5, pp. 851-864. https://doi.org/10.1108/IR-09-2021-0197

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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