ROFeb 21, 2014

Study of the Dynamic Coupling Term (μ) in Parallel Force/Velocity Actuated Systems

arXiv:1402.5233v19 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This provides a design guideline for PFVAs in robotics or mechanical systems, but it is incremental as it builds on existing actuator concepts.

The paper investigates how the relative scale factor between force and velocity actuators in a parallel force/velocity actuator (PFVA) affects dynamic coupling, showing analytically and numerically that increasing the factor decouples the inputs with respect to inertia torques.

Presented in this paper is an actuator concept, called a Parallel Force/Velocity Actuator (PFVA), that combines two fundamentally distinct actuators (one using low gear reduction or even direct drive, which we will call a Force Actuator (FA) and the other with a high reduction gear train that we will refer to as a Velocity Actuator (VA)). The objective of this work is to evaluate the effect of the relative scale factor, RSF, (ratio of gear reductions) between these inputs on their dynamic coupling. We conceptually describe a Parallel Force/Velocity Actuator (PFVA) based on a Dual-Input-Single- Output (DISO) epicyclic gear train. We then present an analytical formulation for the variation of the dynamic coupling term w.r.t. RSF. Conclusions from this formulation are illustrated through a numerical example involving a 1-DOF four-bar linkage. It is shown, both analytically and numerically, that as we increase the RSF, the two inputs to the PFVA are decoupled w.r.t. the inertia torques. This understanding can serve as an important design guideline for PFVAs. The paper also presents two limitations of this study and suggests future work based on these caveats.

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