Kinematic Singularities of the Ball-Chew-Pignotti Multiparticle Amplitudes

1969 ◽  
Vol 188 (5) ◽  
pp. 2254-2263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bengt E. Y. Svensson
Author(s):  
Sameer Gupta ◽  
Ekta Singla ◽  
Sanjeev Soni ◽  
Ashish Singla

Abstract This paper presents the singularity analysis of a 7-degrees of freedom (DOF) hybrid manipulator consisting of a closed-loop within it. From the past studies, it is well-known that the kinematic singularities play a significant role in the design and control of robotic manipulators. Kinematic singularities pose two-fold effects – first, they can induce the loss of one or more DOF of the manipulator and cause infinite joint rates at that particular joint, and second, they help to determine the trajectory or zone with high mechanical advantage. In current work, a 7-DOF hybrid manipulator is considered which is being developed at Council Of Scientific And Industrial Research–Central Scientific Instruments Organisation (CSIR–CSIO) Chandigarh to assist a surgeon during a medical-surgical task. To emulate the natural motion of a surgeon, the challenging configuration with redundant DOF is utilized. Jacobian has been computed analytically and analyzed at each instantaneous configuration with the evaluation of manipulability. Effect of a closed loop in the hybrid configurations is focused at, and utilizing the contour plots, good and worst working zones are identified in the workspace of the manipulator. The verification and validation of best and worst manipulability points (singularities) are done with the help of genetic algorithms, to determine locally and globally optimal configurations. Finally, on the basis of the singularity analysis, the present work concludes with few guidelines to the surgeon about the best and worst working zones for surgical tasks.


Author(s):  
Sunil Kumar Agrawal ◽  
J. Rambhaskar

Abstract This paper deals with Jacobian singularities of free-floating open-chain planar manipulators. The problem, in essence, is to find the joint angles where the Jacobian mapping between the end-effector rates and the joint rates is singular. In the absence of external forces and couples, for free-floating manipulators, the linear and angular momentum are conserved. This makes the singular configurations of free-floating manipulators different from structurally similar fixed-base manipulators. In order to illustrate this idea, we present a systematic method to obtain the singular solutions of a free-floating series-chain planar manipulator with revolute joints. We show that the singular configurations are solutions of simultaneous polynomial equations in the half-tangent of the joint variables. From the structure of these polynomial equations, we estimate the upper bound on the number of singularities of free-floating planar manipulators and compare these with analogous results for structurally similar fixed-base manipulators.


Robotica ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 34 (9) ◽  
pp. 2027-2038 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mustafa Özdemir

SUMMARYWhen compared to serial manipulators, parallel manipulators have small workspaces mainly due to their closed-loop structure. As opposed to type I singularities (or inverse kinematic singularities) that are generally encountered at the workspace boundaries, type II singularities characteristically arise within the workspace, and around them, the inverse dynamic solution becomes unbounded. Hence, a desired trajectory passing through a type II singular position cannot be achieved by the manipulator, and its useful workspace becomes further and substantially reduced. It has been previously shown in the literature that if the trajectory is replanned in such a way that the dynamic equations of motion of the manipulator are consistent at a type II singularity, i.e. if the trajectory is consistent, then the manipulator passes through this singular configuration in a controllable manner, while the inverse dynamic solution remains finite. An inconsistent trajectory, on the other hand, is stated in the literature to be unrealizable. However, although seems a promising technique, trajectory replanning itself is also a deviation from the originally desired trajectory, and there might be cases in applications where, due to some task-specific reasons, the desired trajectory, although inconsistent, is not allowed to be replanned to satisfy the consistency conditions. In this paper, a method of singularity robust balancing is proposed for parallel manipulators passing through type II singular configurations while following inconsistent trajectories. By this means, an originally unrealizable inconsistent trajectory passing through a type II singularity can be followed without any deviation, while the required actuator forces remain bounded after the manipulator is balanced according to the design methodology presented in this study. The effectiveness of the introduced method is shown through numerical simulations considering a planar 3-DOF 2-PRR parallel manipulator under different balancing scenarios.


1991 ◽  
Vol 113 (3) ◽  
pp. 272-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Lipkin ◽  
E. Pohl

Kinematic singularities are important considerations in the design and control of robotic manipulators. For six degree-of-freedom manipulators, the vanishing of the determinant of the Jacobian yields the conditions for the primary singularities. Examining the vanishing of the minors of the Jacobian yields further singularities which are special cases of the primary ones. A systematic procedure is presented to efficiently enumerate all possible singular configurations. Special geometries of representative manipulators are exploited by expressing the Jacobian in terms of vector elements. In contrast to using a joint-angle space approach, the resulting expressions yield direct physical interpretations.


Author(s):  
Andreas Müller

The mobility of a linkage is determined by the constraints imposed on its members. The constraints define the configuration space (c-space) variety as the geometric entity in which the finite mobility of a linkage is encoded. The instantaneous motions are determined by the constraints, rather than by the c-space geometry. Shaky linkages are prominent examples that exhibit a higher instantaneous than finite DOF even in regular configurations. Inextricably connected to the mobility are kinematic singularities that are reflected in a change of the instantaneous DOF. The local analysis of a linkage, aiming at determining the instantaneous and finite mobility in a given configuration, hence needs to consider the c-space geometry as well as the constraint system. A method for the local analysis is presented based on a higher-order local approximation of the c-space adopting the concept of the tangent cone to a variety. The latter is the best local approximation of the c-space in a general configuration. It thus allows for investigating the mobility in regular as well as singular configurations. Therewith the c-space is locally represented as an algebraic variety whose degree is the necessary approximation order. In regular configurations the tangent cone is the tangent space. The method is generally applicable and computationally simple. It allows for a classification of linkages as overconstrained and underconstrained, and to identify singularities.


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