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Feed-forward friction and inertia compensation for improving backdrivability of motors

Authors :
Erik Maehle
Patrick Weiss
Patrick Zenker
Source :
ICARCV
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
IEEE, 2012.

Abstract

Backdrivability is an important property in applications like haptics, where force or torque is exerted by the user onto the motor. Gears cause higher friction, which results in a reduction of the backdrivability. This paper investigates how the backdriving torque can be reduced without the additional use of expensive force-torque sensors. The friction compensation uses a predetermined mapping, that adapts the motor's supporting torque depending on the measured velocity. The inertia compensation depends on the acceleration multiplied by the motor's moment of inertia. The method was objectively evaluated by using a robot. Kinetic friction compensation with inertia compensation significantly reduced the backdriving torque by 66.67 % over all median, and 23.58 % over all average values from measurements with different velocity and acceleration profiles. However, the variance and torque peaks were increased. The inertia compensation showed slight benefits in comparison to kinetic compensation alone, but not throughout all measurements.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
2012 12th International Conference on Control Automation Robotics & Vision (ICARCV)
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b7301d0edc8f9c4d68c380e610206e50
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/icarcv.2012.6485173