An analysis of the post-fault behavior of robotic
manipulators
An analysis of the post-fault behavior of robotic
manipulators
M. Goel, A. A. Maciejewski and V. Balakrishnan
In Proc. IEEE Int. Conf. on Robotics and Automation, pp. 2583-2588,
Albuquerque, NM, April 1997
Abstract: Operations in hazardous or remote environments are
invariably performed by robots. The hostile nature of the
environments, however, increase the likelihood of failures for robots
used in such applications. The difficulty and delay in the detection
and consequent correction of these faults makes the post-faultp
erformance of the robots particularly important. This work
investigates the behavior of robots experiencing undetected
locked-joint failures in a general class of tasks characterized by
point-to-point motion. The robot is considered to have "converged" to
a task position and orientation if all its joints come to rest when
the end-effector is at that position. It is seen that the post-fault
behavior may be classified in to three categories: 1. The robot
converges to the task position; 2. the robot converges to a position
other than the task position; or 3. the robot does not converge, but
keeps moving forever. The specific conditions for convergence are
identified, and the different behaviors illustrated with examples of
simple planar manipulators.
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