DocumentCode
2941211
Title
The Design of A Gearless Pitch-Roll Wrist
Author
Bai, S.P. ; Angeles, J.
Author_Institution
Mechanical Engineering Department & Centre for Intelligent Machines McGill University, Canada, email: mspbai@cim.mcgill.ca
fYear
2005
fDate
18-22 April 2005
Firstpage
3213
Lastpage
3218
Abstract
Robotic wrists are commonly used in manipulators for applications that require a large dexterous workspace. Although bevel-gear wrists are widely used in industrial manipulators due to their simple kinematics and low manufacturing cost, their gear trains function under rolling and sliding, the latter bringing about noise and vibration. Sliding is inherent to the straight teeth of the bevel gears of these trains. To alleviate these drawbacks, a wrist with cam-roller pairs under pure rolling is proposed here. This paper reports the design of an innovative robotic pitch-roll wrist using multi-lobe cams. The wrist has two degrees of freedom and consists of two roller-carriers (RCs) driving a multi-lobe cam to produce roll and pitch motions. The pure rolling between cam and rollers helps reduce the friction. Moreover, the cam transmission works with low backlash and high stiffness. In view of the kinematic performance, the wrist exhibits favorable features, including a singularity-free unlimited workspace.
Keywords
Robotic wrist; cam-roller pairs; differential mechanism; singularity-free workspace; Cams; Cost function; Gears; Industrial training; Kinematics; Manipulators; Manufacturing industries; Service robots; Teeth; Wrist; Robotic wrist; cam-roller pairs; differential mechanism; singularity-free workspace;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation, 2005. ICRA 2005. Proceedings of the 2005 IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8914-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ROBOT.2005.1570605
Filename
1570605
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