Analysis and Design of Optimally Fault Tolerant Robots

Robot manipulators can be used to navigate and perform tasks in unstructured and hazardous environments where human safety is a primary concern. For example, they are used for nuclear waste disposal, space exploration, nuclear power industry, military surveillance, etc. A number of such robot manipu...

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Other Authors: Siddiqui, Salman A. (authoraut)
Format: Others
Language:English
English
Published: Florida State University
Subjects:
Online Access:http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-5433
id ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_183306
record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language English
English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Electrical engineering
Computer engineering
spellingShingle Electrical engineering
Computer engineering
Analysis and Design of Optimally Fault Tolerant Robots
description Robot manipulators can be used to navigate and perform tasks in unstructured and hazardous environments where human safety is a primary concern. For example, they are used for nuclear waste disposal, space exploration, nuclear power industry, military surveillance, etc. A number of such robot manipulators are being used but the concern is that these robots should be able to complete their critical tasks in the event of failures that they encounter working in such environments. One of the most common failures of field robots is an actuator failure. This type of failure affects the joints of the robots inducing failures like locked-joint failures and free-swinging joint failures. To design a fault tolerant system the robot has to rely on the incorporation of redundancy into its system. This redundancy takes several forms: sensor redundancy, analytical redundancy, and kinematic redundancy. This work focuses on using kinematic redundancy to deal with the issue of multiple locked-joint failures in the robotic systems. The goal of this work was to analyze and design fault-tolerant manipulators. The robots designed are able to finish their required task in spite of a failure in one or more of its joints. In order to design optimally fault tolerant manipulators, it is necessary to quantify fault tolerance. The approach taken here was to define fault tolerance in terms of a suitable objective function based on the robot's manipulator Jacobian. In the case of the relative manipulability index, local fault tolerance is characterized by the null space of the manipulator Jacobian. Since the null space can be used to identify locally fault tolerant manipulator configurations, one goal of this work was to develop procedures for designing fault tolerant manipulators based on obtaining a suitable null space for the manipulator Jacobian. In this work, optimally fault tolerant serial manipulators are designed that are fault tolerant to two locked-joint failures simultaneously. Furthermore, the symmetry of the manipulators is studied using positional and orientational Jacobians; and examples are presented for condition number and dynamic manipulability index to study the behavior of different fault tolerance measures. Lastly, a methodology for designing an optimally fault tolerant 4-DOF spherical wrist type mechanism was presented. It was shown that the orientational Jacobian must have a certain form for the manipulator to have the best possible relative manipulability index value. An optimal configuration along with the corresponding DH parameters was presented. Furthermore, it was pointed out that isotropic configurations of a 4-DOF spherical wrist type mechanism are fault tolerant and optimal in the sense that they have the largest possible manipulability index prior to a failure. An example of an orientational Jacobian was presented for a 6-DOF spherical wrist that is equally fault tolerant for any two joint failures. === A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. === Fall Semester, 2012. === October 10, 2012. === Condition number, Fault tolerance, Kinematic redundancy, Local measures, Manipulability, Spherical wrist === Includes bibliographical references. === Rodney G. Roberts, Professor Directing Thesis; Carl A. Moore, University Representative; Simon Y. Foo, Committee Member; Leonard J. Tung, Committee Member.
author2 Siddiqui, Salman A. (authoraut)
author_facet Siddiqui, Salman A. (authoraut)
title Analysis and Design of Optimally Fault Tolerant Robots
title_short Analysis and Design of Optimally Fault Tolerant Robots
title_full Analysis and Design of Optimally Fault Tolerant Robots
title_fullStr Analysis and Design of Optimally Fault Tolerant Robots
title_full_unstemmed Analysis and Design of Optimally Fault Tolerant Robots
title_sort analysis and design of optimally fault tolerant robots
publisher Florida State University
url http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-5433
_version_ 1719319863828152320
spelling ndltd-fsu.edu-oai-fsu.digital.flvc.org-fsu_1833062020-06-16T03:07:04Z Analysis and Design of Optimally Fault Tolerant Robots Siddiqui, Salman A. (authoraut) Roberts, Rodney G. (professor directing thesis) Moore, Carl A. (university representative) Foo, Simon Y. (committee member) Tung, Leonard J. (committee member) Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (degree granting department) Florida State University (degree granting institution) Text text Florida State University Florida State University English eng 1 online resource computer application/pdf Robot manipulators can be used to navigate and perform tasks in unstructured and hazardous environments where human safety is a primary concern. For example, they are used for nuclear waste disposal, space exploration, nuclear power industry, military surveillance, etc. A number of such robot manipulators are being used but the concern is that these robots should be able to complete their critical tasks in the event of failures that they encounter working in such environments. One of the most common failures of field robots is an actuator failure. This type of failure affects the joints of the robots inducing failures like locked-joint failures and free-swinging joint failures. To design a fault tolerant system the robot has to rely on the incorporation of redundancy into its system. This redundancy takes several forms: sensor redundancy, analytical redundancy, and kinematic redundancy. This work focuses on using kinematic redundancy to deal with the issue of multiple locked-joint failures in the robotic systems. The goal of this work was to analyze and design fault-tolerant manipulators. The robots designed are able to finish their required task in spite of a failure in one or more of its joints. In order to design optimally fault tolerant manipulators, it is necessary to quantify fault tolerance. The approach taken here was to define fault tolerance in terms of a suitable objective function based on the robot's manipulator Jacobian. In the case of the relative manipulability index, local fault tolerance is characterized by the null space of the manipulator Jacobian. Since the null space can be used to identify locally fault tolerant manipulator configurations, one goal of this work was to develop procedures for designing fault tolerant manipulators based on obtaining a suitable null space for the manipulator Jacobian. In this work, optimally fault tolerant serial manipulators are designed that are fault tolerant to two locked-joint failures simultaneously. Furthermore, the symmetry of the manipulators is studied using positional and orientational Jacobians; and examples are presented for condition number and dynamic manipulability index to study the behavior of different fault tolerance measures. Lastly, a methodology for designing an optimally fault tolerant 4-DOF spherical wrist type mechanism was presented. It was shown that the orientational Jacobian must have a certain form for the manipulator to have the best possible relative manipulability index value. An optimal configuration along with the corresponding DH parameters was presented. Furthermore, it was pointed out that isotropic configurations of a 4-DOF spherical wrist type mechanism are fault tolerant and optimal in the sense that they have the largest possible manipulability index prior to a failure. An example of an orientational Jacobian was presented for a 6-DOF spherical wrist that is equally fault tolerant for any two joint failures. A Dissertation submitted to the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Fall Semester, 2012. October 10, 2012. Condition number, Fault tolerance, Kinematic redundancy, Local measures, Manipulability, Spherical wrist Includes bibliographical references. Rodney G. Roberts, Professor Directing Thesis; Carl A. Moore, University Representative; Simon Y. Foo, Committee Member; Leonard J. Tung, Committee Member. Electrical engineering Computer engineering FSU_migr_etd-5433 http://purl.flvc.org/fsu/fd/FSU_migr_etd-5433 This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. You are free to use this Item in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights legislation that applies to your use. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s). The copyright in theses and dissertations completed at Florida State University is held by the students who author them. http://diginole.lib.fsu.edu/islandora/object/fsu%3A183306/datastream/TN/view/Analysis%20and%20Design%20of%20Optimally%20Fault%20Tolerant%20Robots.jpg