2019 6th International Conference on Control, Decision and Information Technologies (CoDIT) 2019
DOI: 10.1109/codit.2019.8820472
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An Intelligent Compensation Through B-Spline Neural Network for a Delta Parallel Robot

Abstract: In this paper a PD controller with intelligent compensation is used to solve the problem of tracking trajectories for a Delta Parallel Robot with three degrees of freedom. This controller uses an artificial B-Spline neural network as a feedforward compensation term. To evaluate the proposed controller performance some numerical simulations under two different scenarios have been carried out in order to know its effectiveness respect to a simple PD controller.

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Cited by 8 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…For the development of the IDM of the delta-like positioning device of SPIDER4, in this study, the simplification hypotheses for delta-like manipulators presented in [26] is considered. It is worth mentioning that these hypotheses also have been considered in previous studies [27], [28], [23]. The considered modeling simplifications are as follows:…”
Section: B Inverse Dynamic Model Of Delta-like Positioning Devicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the development of the IDM of the delta-like positioning device of SPIDER4, in this study, the simplification hypotheses for delta-like manipulators presented in [26] is considered. It is worth mentioning that these hypotheses also have been considered in previous studies [27], [28], [23]. The considered modeling simplifications are as follows:…”
Section: B Inverse Dynamic Model Of Delta-like Positioning Devicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…This advanced control solution requires only position information for the RBF inputs. In [29], a PD controller with a BSNN feedforward compensation was applied to a DPR to regulate the trajectory tracking for a P&P application, demonstrating that the addition of intelligent compensation terms may reduce the tracking error considerably and might cancel the steady-state error for the PD controller. However, only the error signal was taken into consideration as inputs of the BSNN so that the resulting dynamic approximation was not accurate.…”
Section: State Of the Artmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, as it was mentioned before, the BSNN compensation term aims to emulate the Nominal feedforward term. Therefore, in this section, our proposed control solution is compared to the RISE feedforward, being the combination of (27) and (29) to validate the approximation of the dynamics. The case study 1, including the two scenarios, is considered for this validation.…”
Section: Comparison Of Bsnn Compensation Against Nominal Feedforwardmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These challenges have led to the development of other techniques centered on servo error estimation and disturbance rejection [9]- [14]. These include methods like changing the PD gains online as a function of servo error estimates [9], disturbance rejection in the feedback loop using linear disturbance observers [10], [11], injecting inputs learned by a neural network to compensate errors that the PD controller does not reject [12], and using synchronization control strategies to reject coupling disturbances in each actuator from the other actuators [13], [14]. Furthermore, other approaches focus on tuning trajectory-dependent PID controller gains offline to minimize errors along a desired path that is known a priori [15], [16].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%