About

Alessandro De Luca stands as one of the most influential figures in robotics research, with his work spanning mobile robot control, physical human-robot interaction (pHRI), and robot safety. His contributions have fundamentally shaped how robots operate alongside humans in shared environments. De Luca's early work on wheeled mobile robots established landmark results in nonholonomic control, with his papers on dynamic feedback linearization and car-like robot control (collectively exceeding 1,300 citations) providing both rigorous theory and practical implementation frameworks still widely referenced today. He later became a pioneering voice in robot safety, co-authoring the comprehensive "Atlas of Physical Human-Robot Interaction" (803 citations) and developing collision detection and reaction methodologies that have become foundational to the field, drawing over 1,700 citations across multiple studies. His sensorless collision detection approach—treating unexpected contacts as actuator faults—was a particularly elegant innovation, enabling safe human-robot coexistence without costly additional sensors. More recently, his survey on robot collision handling (754 citations) and work on dynamic identification of the Franka Emika Panda robot reflect his sustained relevance at the frontier of collaborative robotics. With a body of work exceeding 5,700 citations in these ten papers alone, De Luca's research continues to guide both academic inquiry and industrial robot design worldwide.

Research Focus

Key Achievements

57
H-Index
188
Papers
14,459
Total Citations
77
Avg Citations/Paper
🏆 Most Cited Paper
An atlas of physical human–robot interaction
803 citations · 2007
📈 Most Prolific Year: 2002 (22 Papers)
🤝 Key Collaborators: 150
🏛 Institutions: Sapienza University of Rome, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, University of Milano-Bicocca, Centre de Recherche en Automatique de Nancy

Top Papers

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Key Collaborators

Contact & Links

Available for collaboration
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