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A synthesis method of spatial over-constrained mechanisms based on kinematics of serial manipulators

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 June 2022

Fu-Hsiung Lee
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C.
Kuan-Lun Hsu*
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, R.O.C.
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: kuanlunhsu@ntu.edu.tw
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Abstract

This paper proposes a modular method based on the kinematics of serial manipulators to synthesize over-constrained mechanisms. Because the PPP manipulator has an unlimited work space, its end-effector can be constrained to trace a trajectory identical to those of another open-chain manipulator, including a P joint single link and an RR dyad. In doing so, two open-chain manipulators can be concatenated to form closed-loop mechanisms, including PPPP, PPPRR, or PPCR mechanisms. To design over-constrained mechanisms efficiently, the Denavit–Hartenberg convention is adopted to describe the PPP manipulator kinematically, and the Euler angles are utilized to derive geometric constraints of synthesized over-constrained mechanisms. Next, kinematic equations of the PPP manipulator can be modularized and applicable to analyze different closed-loop mechanisms. At last, by adjusting link lengths, twisted angles, and joint angles of the synthesized PPPRR and PPCR mechanisms to form other over-constrained mechanisms configurationally. The novelty of this research lies in modularizing the over-constrained mechanism into two movable serial manipulators whose end-effectors share identical trajectory and orientation. Thus, defining geometrical constraints of the over-constrained mechanism can be transformed into finding angular parameters describing the orientation of these two serial manipulators such that the end-effector coordinate system of two manipulators can properly be aligned. Angular parameters of the serial manipulators can be easily determined by means of Euler angles, which yields an advantage of easy calculation since it only involves the computation of Euler angles parameters. The presented method can be extended to the kinematic synthesis and analysis of more spatial closed-loop mechanisms.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. PPP open-chain manipulator.

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Table I. Link parameters for the PPP open-chain manipulator.

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Table II. Link parameters for the three-link Cartesian robot.

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Figure 2. Spatial PPPP mechanism by combining two open-chain manipulators.

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Figure 3. Synthesis of spatial PPPR mechanism using ZXZ Euler angles convention.

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Table III. Link parameters involving ZXZ Euler angles convention for the closed-loop PPPP mechanism.

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Figure 4. Synthesis of spatial PPPR mechanism using XZX Euler Angles convention.

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Table IV. Link parameters involving XZX Euler angles convention for the closed-loop PPPP mechanism.

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Figure 5. Kinematic analysis of a spatial PPPP mechanism.

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Table V. ZXZ Euler angles convention for synthesized PPPP mechanism.

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Table VI. D-H table for synthesized PPPP mechanism.

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Figure 6. Synthesized PPPP mechanism using presented methodology.

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Figure 7. Two open-chain manipulators used to form A spatial PPPRR mechanism.

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Figure 8. Spatial PPPRR mechanism by combining two open-chain manipulators.

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Table VII. Link parameters for the closed-loop PPPRR mechanism.

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Table VIII. Link parameters involving ZXZ Euler angles convention for the closed-loop PPPRR mechanism.

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Table IX. Link parameters involving XZX Euler angles convention for the closed-loop PPPRR mechanism.

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Table X. ZXZ Euler angles convention for synthesized PPPRR mechanism.

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Table XI. D-H table for synthesized PPPRR mechanism.

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Figure 9. Synthesized PPPRR mechanism using presented methodology.

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Figure 10. Cylindrical joint formed by a revolute and a prismatic joint along the same axis.

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Table XII. Link parameters involving ZXZ Euler angles convention for the closed-loop PPCR mechanism.

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Figure 11. Synthesized PPPRR mechanism and its isomer.

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Figure 12. Assembly of the two PPPRR mechanisms and their schematics.

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Figure 13. Synthesized RRPRRP mechanism and its motion animation.

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Figure 14. Assembly of the PPPRR and PPCR mechanisms and their schematics.

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Figure 15. Synthesized RRPRC mechanism and its motion animation.

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Figure 16. Assembly of two PPCR mechanisms and their schematics.

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Figure 17. Synthesized RCRC mechanism and its motion animation.