Title :
Passive Bilateral Teleoperation With Constant Time Delay
Author :
Lee, Dongjun ; Spong, Mark W.
Author_Institution :
Coordinated Sci. Lab., Illinois Univ., Urbana, IL
fDate :
4/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We propose a novel control framework for bilateral teleoperation of a pair of multi-degree-of-freedom nonlinear robotic systems under constant communication delays. The proposed framework uses the simple proportional-derivative control, i.e., the master and slave robots are directly connected via spring and damper over the delayed communication channels. Using the controller passivity concept, the Lyapunov-Krasovskii technique, and Parseval´s identity, we can passify the combination of the delayed communication and control blocks altogether robustly, as long as the delays are finite constants and an upper bound for the round-trip delay is known. Having explicit position feedback through the delayed P-action, the proposed framework enforces master-slave position coordination, which is often compromised in the conventional scattering-based teleoperation. The proposed control framework provides humans with extended physiological proprioception, so that s/he can affect and sense the remote slave environments mainly relying on her/his musculoskeletal systems. Simulation and experiments are performed to validate and highlight properties of the proposed control framework
Keywords :
PD control; delays; feedback; nonlinear control systems; position control; telerobotics; Lyapunov-Krasovskii technique; Parseval´s identity; constant time delay; control framework; controller passivity concept; delayed communication channels; multi-degree-of-freedom nonlinear robotic systems; passive bilateral teleoperation; proportional-derivative control; Communication channels; Communication system control; Control systems; Delay effects; Master-slave; Nonlinear control systems; PD control; Robot kinematics; Robust control; Springs; Bilateral teleoperation; Lyapunov–Krasovskii functionals; Parseval´s identity; communication delays; extended physiological proprioception (EPP); passivity; proportional-derivative (PD) control;
Journal_Title :
Robotics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TRO.2005.862037