RONov 13, 2018

Minimizing Energy Consumption and Peak Power of Series Elastic Actuators: a Convex Optimization Framework for Elastic Element Design

arXiv:1811.05057v351 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses energy efficiency and performance limitations in robotic actuators, particularly for prosthetics, though it is incremental as it builds on existing parametric optimization methods.

The authors tackled the problem of designing nonlinear elastic elements for Series Elastic Actuators (SEAs) to minimize energy consumption and peak power for arbitrary periodic trajectories, proposing a convex optimization framework that recovers known profiles like cubic springs and extends task ranges in applications such as ankle prostheses.

Compared to rigid actuators, Series Elastic Actuators (SEAs) offer a potential reduction of motor energy consumption and peak power, though these benefits are highly dependent on the design of the torque-elongation profile of the elastic element. In the case of linear springs, natural dynamics is a traditional method for this design, but it has two major limitations: arbitrary load trajectories are difficult or impossible to analyze and it does not consider actuator constraints. Parametric optimization is also a popular design method that addresses these limitations, but solutions are only optimal within the space of the parameters. To overcome these limitations, we propose a non-parametric convex optimization program for the design of the nonlinear elastic element that minimizes energy consumption and peak power for an arbitrary periodic reference trajectory. To obtain convexity, we introduce a convex approximation to the expression of peak power; energy consumption is shown to be convex without approximation. The combination of peak power and energy consumption in the cost function leads to a multiobjective convex optimization framework that comprises the main contribution of this paper. As a case study, we recover the elongation-torque profile of a cubic spring, given its natural oscillation as the reference load. We then design nonlinear SEAs for an ankle prosthesis that minimize energy consumption and peak power for different trajectories and extend the range of achievable tasks when subject to actuator constraints.

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