Purpose
This paper aims to present a soft closed-chain modular gripper for robotic pick-and-place applications. The proposed biomimetic gripper design is inspired by the Fin Ray effect, derived from fish fins physiology. It is composed of three axisymmetric fingers, actuated with a single actuator. Each finger has a modular under-actuated closed-chain structure. The finger structure is compliant in contact normal direction, with stiff crossbeams reorienting to help the finger structure conform around objects.
Design/methodology/approach
Starting with the design and development of the proposed gripper, a consequent mathematical representation consisting of closed-chain forward and inverse kinematics is detailed. The proposed mathematical framework is validated through the finite element modeling simulations. Additionally, a set of experiments was conducted to compare the simulated and prototype finger trajectories, as well as to assess qualitative grasping ability.
Findings
Key Findings are the presented mathematical model for closed-loop chain mechanisms, as well as design and optimization guidelines to develop controlled closed-chain grippers.
Research limitations/implications
The proposed methodology and mathematical model could be taken as a fundamental modular base block to explore similar distributed degrees of freedom (DOF) closed-chain manipulators and grippers. The enhanced kinematic model contributes to optimized dynamics and control of soft closed-chain grasping mechanisms.
Practical implications
The approach is aimed to improve the development of soft grippers that are required to grasp complex objects found in human–robot cooperation and collaborative robot (cobot) applications.
Originality/value
The proposed closed-chain mathematical framework is based on distributed DOFs instead of the conventional lumped joint approach. This is to better optimize and understand the kinematics of soft robotic mechanisms.
This paper investigates the integration of laser profile sensor to an industrial robotic arm for automating the quality inspection in manufacturing processes that requires a manual labour intensive work. The aim was to register the measurements from a laser profile sensor mounted on a six degrees-of-freedom robot with respect to the robot base frame. The registration is based on a six degrees-of-freedom calibration, which is an essential step for several automated manufacturing processes that require high level of accuracy in tool positioning and alignment on one hand, and quality inspection systems that require flexibility and accurate measurements on the other hand. The investigation compromises of two calibration procedures namely the calibration using a sharp object and the planar constraints. The solution of the calibration procedures estimated from both iterative and optimization solvers is thoroughly discussed. By implementing a simulation platform that generates virtual data for the two procedures with additional levels of noise, the six-dimensional poses are estimated and compared to the ground truth. Finally, an experimental test using a laser profile from Acuity mounted on Mitsubishi RV-6SDL manipulator is presented to investigate the measurement accuracy with four estimated laser poses. The calibration procedure using a sharp object shows the most accurate simulation and experimental results under the effect of noise.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.