Title :
Standing self-manipulation for a legged robot
Author :
Johnson, Aaron M. ; Haynes, G. Clark ; Koditschek, D.E.
Author_Institution :
Electr. & Syst. Eng. Dept., Univ. of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USA
Abstract :
On challenging, uneven terrain a legged robot´s open loop posture will almost inevitably be inefficient, due to uncoordinated support of gravitational loads with coupled internal torques. By reasoning about certain structural properties governing the infinitesimal kinematics of the closed chains arising from a typical stance, we have developed a computationally trivial self-manipulation behavior that can minimize both internal and external torques absent any terrain information. The key to this behavior is a change of basis in torque space that approximates the partially decoupled nature of the two types of disturbances. The new coordinates reveal how to use actuator current measurements as proprioceptive sensors for the approximate gradients of both the internal and external task potential fields, without recourse to further modeling. The behavior is derived using a manipulation framework informed by the dual relationship between a legged robot and a multifingered hand. We implement the reactive posture controller resulting from simple online descent along these proprioceptively sensed gradients on the X-RHex robot to document the significant savings in standing power.
Keywords :
dexterous manipulators; legged locomotion; mechanoception; position control; robot kinematics; torque control; X-RHex robot; actuator current measurement; approximate gradients; closed chain; computationally trivial self-manipulation behavior; dual relationship; external task potential field; external torque minimization; gravitational load; infinitesimal kinematics; internal task potential field; internal torque minimization; legged robot open loop posture; manipulation framework; multifingered hand; proprioceptive sensor; reactive posture controller; robot stance; standing power; standing self-manipulation; terrain information; torque space; uneven terrain; Approximation methods; Force; Joints; Legged locomotion; Robot kinematics; Torque;
Conference_Titel :
Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS), 2012 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Vilamoura
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-1737-5
DOI :
10.1109/IROS.2012.6386214