Affiliation:
1. Robotics Research Laboratory Department of Mechanical Engineering The University of New Mexico Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131
Abstract
Grasping an object with a multifingered robot hand requires complete constraint of its motion by contacts. Complete con straint of an object can also be described using force equilib rium. If any external force on the object can be balanced by applicable contact forces, a stable grasp has been achieved. A force closure grasp is such a grasp. This article presents a simple and efficient algorithm to find an optimum force clo sure grasp of a planar polygon using a three fingered robot hand. The optimum grasp is defined as a grasp that has the minimum value of a heuristic function. The heuristic function is formulated from the consideration of the possible uncertainties inherent in implementation. Even though a planar force clo sure grasp can be obtained using only two friction contacts, we consider only grasps where all three friction contacts explicitly participate. To find the optimum grasp, all feasible combina tions of edges and/or vertices are identified first. An edges and/or vertices combination is feasible when a stable grasp is attainable by an appropriate selection of three contacts on them. Then, using computational geometry, a single grasp is constructed on each feasible combination. Finally, the grasps obtained are compared using the heuristic quality measure. A test of our algorithm on several different polygons shows that the resulting grasp is realistic and is obtained fast enough for real-time use.
Subject
Applied Mathematics,Artificial Intelligence,Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Mechanical Engineering,Modelling and Simulation,Software
Reference24 articles.
1. Automatic Grasp Planning in the Presence of Uncertainty
2. Dufay, B., and Laugier, C. 1983. Geometrical reasoning in automatic grasping and contact analysis. In Advances in CAD/CAM. North-Holland , pp. 473-482.
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