Virtual Model Control for Quadruped Robots

Guangrong Chen*, Sheng Guo, Bowen Hou, Junzheng Wang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

37 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Virtual model control is a motion control framework that uses virtual components to create virtual forces/torques, which are actually generated by joint actuators when the virtual components interact with robot systems. Firstly, this paper employs virtual model control to do a dynamic balance control of whole body of quadruped robots' trot gait in a bottom controller. In each leg, there exists a designed swing phase virtual model control and a stance phase counterparts. In the whole body, virtual model control is utilized to achieve a attitude control containing roll, pitch and yaw. In the attitude control, a forces/torques distribution method between two stance legs is pre-investigated. In a high-level implemented controller, an intuitive velocity control approach proposed by Raibert is applied for the locomotion of quadruped robots. Secondly, an anti-disturbance control, which contains compensating gravity, adjusting step length, adjusting swing trajectory, adjusting attitude, and adjusting virtual forces/torques, is investigated to improve the robustness, terrain adaptability, and dynamic balance performance of quadrupedal locomotion. Thirdly, a trajectory tracking control method based on an intuitive velocity control is addressed through considering four factors: terrain complexity index, curvature radius of given trajectory, distance to terminal, and maximum velocity of quadruped robots. Finally, simulations validate the effectiveness of proposed controllers.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9153894
Pages (from-to)140736-140751
Number of pages16
JournalIEEE Access
Volume8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Keywords

  • Virtual model control
  • anti-disturbance control
  • dynamic balance control
  • quadruped robots
  • trajectory tracking control

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