Publication | Closed Access
Control of repulsive force in a virtual environment using an electrorheological haptic master for a surgical robot application
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Citations
17
References
2013
Year
Robot KinematicsHaptic FeedbackEngineeringNew TypeField RoboticsHaptic TechnologyMotor ControlSurgeryHaptic MasterVirtual EnvironmentKinesiologySoft RoboticsKinematicsRehabilitation EngineeringRoboticsMechatronicsMedical RobotRobot ControlRepulsive ForceMechanical SystemsRobot-assisted SurgerySurgical Robot ApplicationMedicine
This paper presents control performances of a new type of four-degrees-of-freedom (4-DOF) haptic master that can be used for robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery (RMIS). By adopting a controllable electrorheological (ER) fluid, the function of the proposed master is realized as a haptic feedback as well as remote manipulation. In order to verify the efficacy of the proposed master and method, an experiment is conducted with deformable objects featuring human organs. Since the use of real human organs is difficult for control due to high cost and moral hazard, an excellent alternative method, the virtual reality environment, is used for control in this work. In order to embody a human organ in the virtual space, the experiment adopts a volumetric deformable object represented by a shape-retaining chain linked (S-chain) model which has salient properties such as fast and realistic deformation of elastic objects. In haptic architecture for RMIS, the desired torque/force and desired position originating from the object of the virtual slave and operator of the haptic master are transferred to each other. In order to achieve the desired torque/force trajectories, a sliding mode controller (SMC) which is known to be robust to uncertainties is designed and empirically implemented. Tracking control performances for various torque/force trajectories from the virtual slave are evaluated and presented in the time domain.
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