Robotic hands

Robot_hands

Description

Introduction
Many research areas exist in Robotics, for example, the developement of robotic arms, manipulator robots, humanoids and robots created for disable people´s assistance.
A common caracteristic between all those robots is the need of a manipulator which allows it to fulfil certain tasks. This manipulator should be universal in order to give the robot the possibility of being used in as many tasks as the user may want or need. For that reason, the objetive of imitating the human hand grows: it is the best manipulator created by Nature.
Currently, The Robotic´s Lab has two projects:

  • RL1 Hand
  • UC3M Hand

RL1 Hand
The RL1 Hand is a Robotic Claw design to be mounted on the ASIBOT Robot for helping disable people. Due to the fact that the claw was expected to fit inside the Robot´s Docking Station it had to reach certain caracteristics. A Docking Station is a mechanism that allows the robot to trasnsport throught different enviroments; this feature makes the ASIBOT Robot a climbing robot.


The movement to make the claw pass from a resting state (inside the Docking Station) to a operative state, requires a high complexity internal mechanism. This movement is achieved by only one electrical motor, situated inside the Docking Station with the electronic that controls the claw.

The RL1 Hand´s fingers are able to adapt to the objects shape; this guarantee a firm holding in all cases. The three finger are activated by tendons guide throght pulleys.

The RL1 Hand recives specific instructions given by the ASIBOT Robot, throght the serial port.

Nowadays, a second version of the RL1 Hand is being developed (RL2 Hand), focusing on certain mechanisms optimizations which are expected to make the hand more robust.

UC3M Hand

This project is focused on the development of robotic hand capable of being mounted on the RH0 Humanoid. For that reason, the robotic hand needs to fulfil certain requirements, such us:

  • Modular configuration
  • Low weight (less than 700 gr.)
  • High dexterity

To achieve those requirements, certain objetives have been fixed:

  • All the movements must be governed by only one electrical motor
  • The UC3M Hand must contain all the mechanism and the electrical motor
  • The Humanoid must send simple instruccions to the UC3M Hand to control all its tasks

The objetives mentioned above will be reached by the design of an specific actuator and special mechanisms with a complex coontrol.

Entries:
Usability assessment of ASIBOT: a portable robot to aid patients with spinal cord injury
Disability & Rehabilitation: Assistive Technology. , pages: 1 – 11 , 2010
A. Jardon C.A. Monje A. Gil A. Peña
The MATS robot: Service Climbing Robot for Personal Assistance
IEEE Robotics & Automation Magazine. num. 1 , vol. 13 , pages: 51 – 58 , 2006
A. Gimenez A. Jardon
Robots applications against gravity
IEEE Robotics & Automation magazine. num. 1 , vol. 13 , pages: 5 – 6 , 2006

Entries:
Benchmarking Shared Control for Assistive Manipulators: From Controllability to the Speed-Accuracy Trade-Off
IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS 2012), 2012, Vilamoura, Portugal
M.F. Stoelen F. Bonsignorio A. Jardon
Experimental evaluation of assistive robots in virtual domestic scenarios
International Symposium for Automation and Robotics in Construction (ISARC/Gerontechnology 2012). Vol. 11. Num. 2, 2012, Eindhoven, The Netherlands
A. Jardon Juan G. Victores M.F. Stoelen S. Martinez
Methodologies for Experimental Evaluation of Assistive Robotics HRI
ROBOCITY2030 9TH WORKSHOP: ROBOTS COLABORATIVOS E INTERACCION HUMANO-ROBOT, 2011, Madrid, Spain
M.F. Stoelen A. Jardon V. Tejada Juan G. Victores S. Martinez F. Bonsignorio
An information-theoretic approach to modeling and quantifying assistive robotics HRI
Late Breaking Report, Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Human-robot interaction (HRI), Lausanne, Switzerland
M.F. Stoelen F. Bonsignorio A. Jardon
Assistive robots dependability in domestic environment: the ASIBOT kitchen test bed
IARP-IEEE/RAS-EURON Joint Workshop on Shared Control for Robotic Ultra-operations, San Diego, California, Oct 28-30, 2007, 2007, San Diego, CA, EEUU
A. Gimenez S. Martinez A. Jardon
A. I. de la Peña González, A. M. Gil Agudo, Functional Evaluation of ASIBOT, a Portable Robot to Aid Disabled Persons
In Proceedings II International Congress on Domotics, Robotics and Remote‐Assistance for All DRT4all 2007, 2007, Madrid, SPAIN
A. Jardon
Live experimentation of the service robot applicationselderly people care in home environments
IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS'2005), Edmonton, Canada
R. Cabas R. Correal A. Gimenez A. Jardon
Wireless Teleoperation of an Assistive Robot by PDA
The 1st IFAC Symposium on Telematics Applications In Automation and Robotics, 2004, Helsinki, Finland
R. Correal A. Gimenez A. Jardon

Entries:
Progress in Robotics. Communications in Computer and Information Science 44
chapter: Infrared Remote Control with a Social Robot pages: 86 – 95. Springer , ISBN: 978-3-642-03985, 2009
A. Castro-Gonzalez M.A. Salichs
M. Ferre, M. Buss, C. Melchiorri. Advances in Telerobotics
chapter: Introduction to Advances in Telerobotics pages: 1 – 10. Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics (STAR), vol. 31 , ISBN: 978-3-540-71363, 2007

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