4.6 Article

An Analytical Solution for Inverse Kinematics of SSRMS-Type Redundant Manipulators

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23125412

Keywords

inverse kinematics; redundant manipulator; analytical solution; algorithm singularity

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This paper proposes an efficient and accurate analytical solution for inverse kinematics of SSRMS-type redundant manipulators. The method involves introducing an alignment constraint to decompose the spatial inverse kinematics problem into three independent planar subproblems, generating multiple sets of solutions. Additionally, two complementary methods are proposed for overcoming singular configurations and judging unsolvable poses. Numerical simulations demonstrate the performance of the proposed approach in terms of calculation time, success rate, position error, and trajectory planning with singular configurations.
Compared with non-redundant manipulators, the self-motion of 7-DOF redundant manipulators results in an infinite number of inverse kinematics solutions for a desired end-effector pose. This paper proposes an efficient and accurate analytical solution for inverse kinematics of SSRMS-type redundant manipulators. This solution is applicable to SRS-type manipulators with the same configuration. The proposed method involves introducing an alignment constraint to restrain the self-motion and to decompose the spatial inverse kinematics problem into three independent planar subproblems simultaneously. The resulting geometric equations depend on the part of the joint angles, respectively. These equations are then computed recursively and efficiently using the sequences of (?(1),?(7)), (?(2),?(6)), and (?(3),?(4),?(5)), generating up to sixteen sets of solutions for a given desired end-effector pose. Additionally, two complementary methods are proposed for overcoming the possible singular configuration and judging unsolvable poses. Finally, numerical simulations are conducted to investigate the performance of the proposed approach in terms of average calculation time, success rate, average position error, and the ability to plan a trajectory with singular configurations.

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