On tracking performance in bilateral teleoperation
Nikhil Chopra, Mark W. Spong, Roméo Ortega, Nikita Barabanov
- Year
- 2006
- Citations
- 210
Abstract
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
Keywords
Related papers
Artificial intelligence: a modern approach
1995
Applied Nonlinear Control
Jean-Jacques Slotine, Weiping Li
1991
Self-Organizing Maps
Teuvo Kohonen
1995
Vision meets robotics: The KITTI dataset
Andreas Geiger, Philip Lenz, Christoph Stiller +1 more
2013