3.8 Proceedings Paper

Design and Evaluation of a Passive Gripper for Remote Manipulation Tasks

Publisher

SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-21065-5_5

Keywords

Passive gripper; Grasping; Remote handling; Robotics manipulation; IFMIF-DONES

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This paper presents the design of a gripper with spring-maintained resting position for its fingers. By properly applying forces during grasping and following the correct releasing path, the fingers can be displaced. This mechanism overcomes the limitation of conventional actuators in hazardous environments with high radiation levels, but requires redesigning the objects to be manipulated.
This paper describes the design of a gripper in which fingers have a resting position maintained by springs. Fingers can be displaced if the proper forces are applied during the grasping procedure, and the correct path is followed for the releasing. This mechanism solves the constraint of using conventional actuators, which is a common limitation in hazardous environments with a high level of radiation. However, it implies redesigning the objects that will be manipulated. This paper shows in detail the mechanical gripper design, from the study of the already existing solution and modelling, including the kinematic and dynamic models, to the gripper simulation performance and experimental tests with their corresponding conclusions. The origin of this study is related to the maintenance tasks to be performed in the future International FusionMaterials Irradiation Facility - Demo Oriented Neutron Source (IFMIF-DONES) facility, where a high level of ionizing radiation is expected even after the shutdown of the accelerator.

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