Omnidirectional Nonprehensile Manipulation Using Only One Actuator

This paper presents a novel nonprehensile manipulation method that uses the vibration of a plate, where the two degrees of freedom of a part on the plate are controlled by only one actuator. First, a manipulator whose end effector is a flat plate is introduced. By employing an underactuated joint me...

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Main Authors: Mitsuru Higashimori, Kohei Yamaguchi, Akihide Shibata
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-07-01
Series:Robotics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/7/3/34
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spelling doaj-eb512ebbb70b4442a8049b42312f14cc2020-11-24T23:11:18ZengMDPI AGRobotics2218-65812018-07-01733410.3390/robotics7030034robotics7030034Omnidirectional Nonprehensile Manipulation Using Only One ActuatorMitsuru Higashimori0Kohei Yamaguchi1Akihide Shibata2Department of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University, Suita 565-0871, JapanDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University, Suita 565-0871, JapanDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Osaka University, Suita 565-0871, JapanThis paper presents a novel nonprehensile manipulation method that uses the vibration of a plate, where the two degrees of freedom of a part on the plate are controlled by only one actuator. First, a manipulator whose end effector is a flat plate is introduced. By employing an underactuated joint mechanism, the shape and orientation of the vibrational orbit of the plate vary according to frequency and offset angle of the sinusoidal displacement input to an actuator. Then, simulation analyses reveal that the manipulator can omnidirectionally induce translational velocity to the part on the plate. There exists an orthogonality between the effects of the frequency and offset angle on the velocity map of the part. Based on this characteristic, a visual feedback control for manipulating the part is designed. Finally, the proposed method is validated via experiments using a prototype manipulator. A target-trajectory tracking task and a four-way part-feeding task are demonstrated.http://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/7/3/34nonprehensile manipulationunderactuated mechanismomnidirectional velocity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mitsuru Higashimori
Kohei Yamaguchi
Akihide Shibata
spellingShingle Mitsuru Higashimori
Kohei Yamaguchi
Akihide Shibata
Omnidirectional Nonprehensile Manipulation Using Only One Actuator
Robotics
nonprehensile manipulation
underactuated mechanism
omnidirectional velocity
author_facet Mitsuru Higashimori
Kohei Yamaguchi
Akihide Shibata
author_sort Mitsuru Higashimori
title Omnidirectional Nonprehensile Manipulation Using Only One Actuator
title_short Omnidirectional Nonprehensile Manipulation Using Only One Actuator
title_full Omnidirectional Nonprehensile Manipulation Using Only One Actuator
title_fullStr Omnidirectional Nonprehensile Manipulation Using Only One Actuator
title_full_unstemmed Omnidirectional Nonprehensile Manipulation Using Only One Actuator
title_sort omnidirectional nonprehensile manipulation using only one actuator
publisher MDPI AG
series Robotics
issn 2218-6581
publishDate 2018-07-01
description This paper presents a novel nonprehensile manipulation method that uses the vibration of a plate, where the two degrees of freedom of a part on the plate are controlled by only one actuator. First, a manipulator whose end effector is a flat plate is introduced. By employing an underactuated joint mechanism, the shape and orientation of the vibrational orbit of the plate vary according to frequency and offset angle of the sinusoidal displacement input to an actuator. Then, simulation analyses reveal that the manipulator can omnidirectionally induce translational velocity to the part on the plate. There exists an orthogonality between the effects of the frequency and offset angle on the velocity map of the part. Based on this characteristic, a visual feedback control for manipulating the part is designed. Finally, the proposed method is validated via experiments using a prototype manipulator. A target-trajectory tracking task and a four-way part-feeding task are demonstrated.
topic nonprehensile manipulation
underactuated mechanism
omnidirectional velocity
url http://www.mdpi.com/2218-6581/7/3/34
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AT koheiyamaguchi omnidirectionalnonprehensilemanipulationusingonlyoneactuator
AT akihideshibata omnidirectionalnonprehensilemanipulationusingonlyoneactuator
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