4.7 Article

A Kinematic Coupling Mechanism With Binary Electromagnetic Actuators for High-Precision Positioning

Journal

IEEE-ASME TRANSACTIONS ON MECHATRONICS
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 892-903

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMECH.2021.3074286

Keywords

Kinematics; Couplings; Actuators; Electromagnets; Mechatronics; Task analysis; Sensors; Binary actuators; kinematics; manipulators; modular robots; robot control

Funding

  1. U.K. EPSRC Project Robotics and Artificial Intelligence in Nuclear [EP/R026084/1]

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This article introduces a novel class of binary-actuated mechanisms driven by electromagnets, which aims to increase repeatability with a kinematic coupling and simplify the control and architecture with a sensorless design. These mechanisms are suited for a wide range of positioning applications.
Rather than working in a continuous range of motion, binary actuators can only maintain two positions. This lack of flexibility is compensated by high accuracy, repeatability, and reliability. These features make binary-actuated mechanisms appealing for space exploration systems, repetitive pick and place tasks, and biomedical applications. This article introduces a novel class of binary-actuated mechanisms driven by electromagnets. As these systems rely on the extreme positions of their binary actuators for positioning, the proposed design aims to increase repeatability with a kinematic coupling. By inverting the polarity of its electromagnets, the configuration of the mechanism can be changed from a discrete state to another one. Thus, when the actuation is known, the pose of the system can be accurately computed without any external feedback. A sensorless design simplifies both the control and the architecture of the proposed design, as well as reducing manufacturing and maintenance costs. The conceptual design of the proposed class of mechanisms is described through two examples with three and four configurations, and alternative designs with higher mobility are discussed. Then, a kinematic synthesis procedure is discussed. Finally, the advantages of asymmetric and irregular designs are outlined. Overall, the proposed mechanisms are suited to a wide range of applications that require a rapid, accurate, and interchangeable positioning of sensors and tools.

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