Flexible Shaft As Remote and Elastic Transmission for Robot Arms
Muhammad Usman, Thierry Hubert, Amin Khorasani, Raphaël Furnémont, Bram Vanderborght, Dirk Lefeber, Greet Van de Perre, Tom Verstraten
Abstract
Research on human-friendly robots focuses on safety through software and hardware. Hardware-based safety offers a significant advantage over software-based safety if an accurate hardware model is integrated into the solution. Design of elastic and off-joint actuation has established safety by hardware, where the inherent qualities of elastic and lightweight nature make the robot safe for interaction. Combining series elastic actuators with cable/belt pulley-based remote transmission offers inherently safe hardware design, albeit with increased design and modeling com- plexity. This letter introduces remote and elastic actuation as a single-element solution for robot arm design using a flexible shaft. The test-bench approach studies the remote and elastic effects of a flexible shaft-based transmission for a robot. A set of nine flexible shafts, differing in length and diameter, are used for benchmarking as 3-D surface empirical maps to facilitate their optimal selection for robot design. An example 3 Degree Of Freedom (DOF) robot arm using a flexible shaft as a remote and elastic actuator is designed and modeled. A low-level control based on a flexible shaft is proposed, backed by the experimental results.