TY - JOUR
T1 - A Friction-Driven Strategy for Agile Steering Wheel Manipulation by Humanoid Robots
AU - Cai, Zhaoyang
AU - Zhu, Xin
AU - Gergondet, Pierre
AU - Chen, Xuechao
AU - Yu, Zhangguo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2023 Zhaoyang Cai et al.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Vehicle driving can substantially enhance the maneuverability of humanoid robots. Agile steering wheel manipulation requires rapid rotation in narrow spaces such as a cab, serving as the foundation for increasing driving speed, especially in an obstacle avoidance scenario. Generally, there are 3 human driving strategies, “Hand-to-Hand,”“Hand-over-Hand,” and “One-Hand.” Based on the human driving motion data, we quantitatively analyze these strategies from 3 aspects, motion range of joint combination, motion region of the shoulder, and velocity of the manipulation. Then, a friction-driven manipulation strategy using one hand is proposed utilizing the similarity between a humanoid robot and a driver (human). It effectively addresses the requirements of both a small range of motion and rapid manipulation. To prevent the deformation of the steering wheel caused by excessive force, we construct an operating force model specifically for the steering wheel. This model accurately describes the relationship between the rotation resistance and the state of the steering wheel. In addition, we propose a quadratic programming (QP)based control framework to servo the robot to track the end-effector position and target wrench output by this model. Finally, the effectiveness of this paper is evaluated through an obstacle avoidance scenario, achieving a maximum rotation velocity of 3.14 rad/s.
AB - Vehicle driving can substantially enhance the maneuverability of humanoid robots. Agile steering wheel manipulation requires rapid rotation in narrow spaces such as a cab, serving as the foundation for increasing driving speed, especially in an obstacle avoidance scenario. Generally, there are 3 human driving strategies, “Hand-to-Hand,”“Hand-over-Hand,” and “One-Hand.” Based on the human driving motion data, we quantitatively analyze these strategies from 3 aspects, motion range of joint combination, motion region of the shoulder, and velocity of the manipulation. Then, a friction-driven manipulation strategy using one hand is proposed utilizing the similarity between a humanoid robot and a driver (human). It effectively addresses the requirements of both a small range of motion and rapid manipulation. To prevent the deformation of the steering wheel caused by excessive force, we construct an operating force model specifically for the steering wheel. This model accurately describes the relationship between the rotation resistance and the state of the steering wheel. In addition, we propose a quadratic programming (QP)based control framework to servo the robot to track the end-effector position and target wrench output by this model. Finally, the effectiveness of this paper is evaluated through an obstacle avoidance scenario, achieving a maximum rotation velocity of 3.14 rad/s.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85179583233&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.34133/cbsystems.0064
DO - 10.34133/cbsystems.0064
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85179583233
SN - 2097-1087
VL - 4
JO - Cyborg and Bionic Systems
JF - Cyborg and Bionic Systems
M1 - 0064
ER -