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Model-based thermal drift compensation for high-precision hexapod robot actuators

arXiv:2603.07141v1
Predicted impact top 73% in RO · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of thermal drift in high-precision hexapod robots, which is critical for applications requiring high accuracy and repeatability.

Thermal expansion in hexapod robot actuators causes positioning errors. This study proposes a model-based method to anticipate and correct thermal drift in one actuator, achieving over 80% reduction in thermally induced expansion.

Thermal expansion is a significant source of positioning error in high-precision hexapod robots (Gough-Stewart platforms). Any variation in the temperature of the hexapod's parts induces expansion, which alters their kinematic model and reduces the robot's accuracy and repeatability. These variations may arise from internal heat sources (such as motors, encoders, and electronics) or from environmental changes. In this study, a method is proposed to anticipate and therefore correct the thermal drift of one of the hexapod precision electro-mechanical actuators. This method is based on determining a model that links the expansion state of the actuator at any given moment to the temperature of some well-chosen points on its surface. This model was initially developed theoretically. Its coefficients were then adjusted experimentally on a specific test-bench, based on a rigorous measurement campaign of actuator expansion using a high-precision interferometric measurement system. Experimental validation demonstrates a reduction of thermally induced expansion by more than 80%. This paves the way for thermal drift correction across the entire robot or similar robotics parts.

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