Publication | Closed Access
Inverse Kinematics for a Point-Foot Quadruped Robot with Dynamic Redundancy Resolution
48
Citations
11
References
2007
Year
Robot KinematicsEngineeringDynamic Redundancy ResolutionField RoboticsMotor ControlLeg TrajectoriesAdvanced Motion ControlKinesiologyIndustrial RoboticsForward KinematicsLegged RobotKinematicsRobot LearningRehabilitation EngineeringHumanoid RobotHealth SciencesMechatronicsMotion SynthesisRedundancy ResolutionPoint-foot Quadruped RobotBipedal LocomotionAerospace EngineeringMechanical SystemsHuman MovementRoboticsInverse Kinematics
In this work we examine the control of center of mass and swing leg trajectories in LittleDog, a point-foot quadruped robot. It is not clear how to formulate a function to compute forward kinematics of the center of mass of the robot as a function of actuated joint angles because point-foot walkers have no direct actuation between the feet and the ground. Nevertheless, we show that a whole-body Jacobian exists and is well defined when at least three of the feet are on the ground. Also, the typical approach of work-space centering for redundancy resolution causes destabilizing motions when executing fast motions. An alternative redundancy resolution optimization is proposed which projects single-leg inverse kinematic solutions into the nullspace. This hybrid approach seems to minimize 1) unnecessary rotation of the body, 2) twisting of the stance legs, and 3) whole-body involvement in achieving a step leg trajectory. In simulation, this control allows the robot to perform significantly more dynamic behaviors while maintaining stability.
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