ROMay 27, 2016

Structured contact force optimization for kino-dynamic motion generation

arXiv:1605.08571v288 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the need for less restrictive models in humanoid robots entering complex environments, representing an incremental improvement over simplified linear models.

The paper tackles the problem of planning robot motion and interaction forces for legged robots in complex environments, and the result is a motion generation algorithm that computes consistent contact forces and joint trajectories with favorable time complexity.

Optimal control approaches in combination with trajectory optimization have recently proven to be a promising control strategy for legged robots. Computationally efficient and robust algorithms were derived using simplified models of the contact interaction between robot and environment such as the linear inverted pendulum model (LIPM). However, as humanoid robots enter more complex environments, less restrictive models become increasingly important. As we leave the regime of linear models, we need to build dedicated solvers that can compute interaction forces together with consistent kinematic plans for the whole-body. In this paper, we address the problem of planning robot motion and interaction forces for legged robots given predefined contact surfaces. The motion generation process is decomposed into two alternating parts computing force and motion plans in coherence. We focus on the properties of the momentum computation leading to sparse optimal control formulations to be exploited by a dedicated solver. In our experiments, we demonstrate that our motion generation algorithm computes consistent contact forces and joint trajectories for our humanoid robot. We also demonstrate the favorable time complexity due to our formulation and composition of the momentum equations.

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