Cable Decoupling and Cable-Based Stiffening of Continuum Robots

Cable-driven continuum robots, which are robots with a continuously flexible backbone and no identifiable joints that are actuated by cables, have shown great potential for many applications in unstructured, uncertain environments. However, the standard design for a cable-driven continuum robot segm...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Parsa Molaei, Nekita A. Pitts, Genevieve Palardy, Ji Su, Matthew K. Mahlin, James H. Neilan, Hunter B. Gilbert
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2022-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9903636/
_version_ 1811239447112450048
author Parsa Molaei
Nekita A. Pitts
Genevieve Palardy
Ji Su
Matthew K. Mahlin
James H. Neilan
Hunter B. Gilbert
author_facet Parsa Molaei
Nekita A. Pitts
Genevieve Palardy
Ji Su
Matthew K. Mahlin
James H. Neilan
Hunter B. Gilbert
author_sort Parsa Molaei
collection DOAJ
description Cable-driven continuum robots, which are robots with a continuously flexible backbone and no identifiable joints that are actuated by cables, have shown great potential for many applications in unstructured, uncertain environments. However, the standard design for a cable-driven continuum robot segment, which bends a continuous backbone along a circular arc, has many compliant modes of deformation which are uncontrolled, and which may result in buckling or other undesirable behaviors if not ameliorated. In this paper, we detail an approach for using additional cables to selectively stiffen planar cable-driven robots without substantial coupling to the actuating cables. A mechanics-based model based on the planar Cosserat equations is used to find the design conditions under which additional cables can be routed without coupling of the cable lengths for small deformations. Simulations show that even for relatively large deformations, coupling remains small. A prototype is evaluated, and it is demonstrated that the compliance of the robot is substantially modified relative to the same robot without stiffening cables. Additional stiffening cables are shown to increase the end-effector output stiffness by a factor of approximately 10 over a typical design with actuating cables.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T13:01:34Z
format Article
id doaj.art-5509e1158f21470998deb89fbbeaa205
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2169-3536
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T13:01:34Z
publishDate 2022-01-01
publisher IEEE
record_format Article
series IEEE Access
spelling doaj.art-5509e1158f21470998deb89fbbeaa2052022-12-22T03:32:10ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362022-01-011010485210486210.1109/ACCESS.2022.32101209903636Cable Decoupling and Cable-Based Stiffening of Continuum RobotsParsa Molaei0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5595-1327Nekita A. Pitts1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4811-2872Genevieve Palardy2Ji Su3Matthew K. Mahlin4https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0015-1621James H. Neilan5Hunter B. Gilbert6https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8590-2596Department of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USADepartment of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USADepartment of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USAAdvanced Materials and Processing Branch, Research Directorate, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, USAStructural Mechanics and Concepts Branch, Research Directorate, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, USASpace Technology and Exploration Directorate, NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, USADepartment of Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, LA, USACable-driven continuum robots, which are robots with a continuously flexible backbone and no identifiable joints that are actuated by cables, have shown great potential for many applications in unstructured, uncertain environments. However, the standard design for a cable-driven continuum robot segment, which bends a continuous backbone along a circular arc, has many compliant modes of deformation which are uncontrolled, and which may result in buckling or other undesirable behaviors if not ameliorated. In this paper, we detail an approach for using additional cables to selectively stiffen planar cable-driven robots without substantial coupling to the actuating cables. A mechanics-based model based on the planar Cosserat equations is used to find the design conditions under which additional cables can be routed without coupling of the cable lengths for small deformations. Simulations show that even for relatively large deformations, coupling remains small. A prototype is evaluated, and it is demonstrated that the compliance of the robot is substantially modified relative to the same robot without stiffening cables. Additional stiffening cables are shown to increase the end-effector output stiffness by a factor of approximately 10 over a typical design with actuating cables.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9903636/Tendon/wire mechanismflexible robotscontinuum robotscompliant joint mechanism
spellingShingle Parsa Molaei
Nekita A. Pitts
Genevieve Palardy
Ji Su
Matthew K. Mahlin
James H. Neilan
Hunter B. Gilbert
Cable Decoupling and Cable-Based Stiffening of Continuum Robots
IEEE Access
Tendon/wire mechanism
flexible robots
continuum robots
compliant joint mechanism
title Cable Decoupling and Cable-Based Stiffening of Continuum Robots
title_full Cable Decoupling and Cable-Based Stiffening of Continuum Robots
title_fullStr Cable Decoupling and Cable-Based Stiffening of Continuum Robots
title_full_unstemmed Cable Decoupling and Cable-Based Stiffening of Continuum Robots
title_short Cable Decoupling and Cable-Based Stiffening of Continuum Robots
title_sort cable decoupling and cable based stiffening of continuum robots
topic Tendon/wire mechanism
flexible robots
continuum robots
compliant joint mechanism
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9903636/
work_keys_str_mv AT parsamolaei cabledecouplingandcablebasedstiffeningofcontinuumrobots
AT nekitaapitts cabledecouplingandcablebasedstiffeningofcontinuumrobots
AT genevievepalardy cabledecouplingandcablebasedstiffeningofcontinuumrobots
AT jisu cabledecouplingandcablebasedstiffeningofcontinuumrobots
AT matthewkmahlin cabledecouplingandcablebasedstiffeningofcontinuumrobots
AT jameshneilan cabledecouplingandcablebasedstiffeningofcontinuumrobots
AT hunterbgilbert cabledecouplingandcablebasedstiffeningofcontinuumrobots