Publication | Closed Access
On tracking performance in bilateral teleoperation
209
Citations
16
References
2006
Year
EngineeringTeleoperationField RoboticsMotor ControlAdvanced Motion ControlForce TrackingKinesiologyVelocity TrackingKinematicsRobot LearningTracking ControlHealth SciencesVision RoboticsMechatronicsMotion ControlRobot ControlVisual ServoingEye TrackingBilateral TeleoperationRobotics
This paper addresses the problem of steady-state position and force tracking in bilateral teleoperation. Passivity-based control schemes for bilateral teleoperation provide robust stability against network delays in the feedback loop and velocity tracking, but do not guarantee steady-state position and force tracking in general. Position drift due to data loss and offset of initial conditions is a well-known problem in such systems. In this paper, we introduce a new architecture, which builds upon the traditional passivity-based configuration by using additional position control on both the master and slave robots, to solve the steady-state position and force-tracking problem. Lyapunov stability methods are used to establish the range of the position control gains on the master and slave sides. Experimental results using a single-degree-of-freedom master/slave system are presented, showing the performance of the resulting system
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