Activity: Talk or presentation › Contributed talk › unknown
Description
Electrically driven Stewart platforms are used in the field of machine tooling
and robotics, where very accurate positions have to be reached associated with
heavy loads. In this paper we present a pneumatically driven Stewart platform powered
by fluidic air muscles. Due to the elasticity of the muscles and air as driving
medium, the robot is predestined for applications where compliance plays a major
role. Compliant behavior is necessary for direct contact with humans. Fitness is an
area, where this contact is given and a fast movement is needed for the body workout.
Another field of application are simulators for computer games or 6D cinemas.
To realize the six degrees of freedom (x, y, z, a; b ; g ) for the Tool Center Point
(TCP) there are six fluidic muscles. Due to the fact that the muscles are only able to
pull on the platform, there is a spring in the middle that applies a compressive force
to the moving part of the robot. The spring is a non modified spiral spring which is
commonly used for the suspension of a passenger car. As a result of the kinematical
model (inverse kinematics, forward kinematics) the workspace is optimized. To dimension
and test the dynamical behavior, a Matlab/Simulink model is derived. This
is done by applying the Projection Equation, a synthetical method for obtaining the
equations of motions for multi body systems. Based on the dynamical model we
develop a control concept in a cascaded structure (pressure control, linearization,
position control). A laboratory setup is used to validate the simulation model. Both,
simulations as well as experimental results demonstrate the success of the proposed
concept.
Period
17 Sept 2008
Event title
The 9th International Conference on Motion and Vibration Control