4.7 Article

A Voltage/Frequency Modeling for a Multi-DOFs Serial Nanorobotic System Based on Piezoelectric Inertial Actuators

Journal

IEEE-ASME TRANSACTIONS ON MECHATRONICS
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 2814-2824

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMECH.2018.2871052

Keywords

Friction; nanorobotics; piezoelectric stick-slip (PSS) actuator; scanning electron microscope (SEM)

Funding

  1. research program Investissements d'avenir through the Robotex Equipment of Excellence [ANR-10-EQPX-44]
  2. project SimRap (CNRS defi Instrumentation aux limites)

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Nanorobotic systems using piezoelectric stick-slip actuators are widely used in nanotechnology. They operate mainly in a coarse-positioning mode and a fine-positioning mode. In the first mode, the actuator performs large displacements with a maximal range of a dozen millimeters but with a low resolution. In the second mode, the displacements are of a few micrometers and below with a nanometer resolution. In order to achieve efficient automated tasks, it is often necessary to define closed-loop tracking strategies. To this end, an accurate multiscale model of the nanorobotic system is required. This paper deals with a new modeling approach to describe the dynamics of this class of systems in the time and the frequency domains for both coarse-and fine-positioning modes. We propose an augmented voltage/frequency modeling of the friction force based on a multistate elastoplastic formulation. Necessary conditions on the presliding modeling are studied to deal with the two operating modes and the motion direction. This model is combined with a nonlinear rate dependent hysteresis model. The main result and contribution of this paper is to demonstrate that a complete nanorobotic task involving closed-loop multiscale displacements can be precisely defined by simulations upstream of a real-time implementation with a mean error of 9.05%. The proposed model opens new perspectives for the definition of control strategies for complex nanorobotic tasks through simulation software tools.

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