ROApr 22

Passive Variable Impedance For Shared Control

arXiv:2604.2055721.51 citations
AI Analysis

This work addresses stabilization issues in shared control for robotic manipulators, offering a flexible method for adaptive guiding, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing impedance control frameworks.

The paper tackled the problem of stabilizing variable stiffness in impedance control and arbitration of multiple controllers in shared robotic manipulation, resulting in a holistic framework that ensures passivity and is validated in simulations and real robot experiments.

Shared Control methods often use impedance control to track target poses in a robotic manipulator. The guidance behavior of such controllers is shaped by the used stiffness gains, which can be varying over time to achieve an adaptive guiding. When multiple target poses are tracked at the same time with varying importance, the corresponding output wrenches have to be arbitrated with weightings changing over time. In this work, we study the stabilization of both variable stiffness in impedance control as well as the arbitration of different controllers through a scaled addition of their output wrenches, reformulating both into a holistic framework. We identify passivity violations in the closed loop system and provide methods to passivate the system. The resulting approach can be used to stabilize standard impedance controllers, allowing for the development of novel and flexible shared control methods. We do not constrain the design of stiffness matrices or arbitration factors; both can be matrix-valued including off-diagonal elements and change arbitrarily over time. The proposed methods are furthermore validated in simulation as well as in real robot experiments on different systems, proving their effectiveness and showcasing different behaviors which can be utilized depending on the requirements of the shared control approach.

Foundations

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