Design of a Multi-Arm Surgical Robotic System for Dexterous Manipulation

Author:

Li Zhi1,Milutinović Dejan2,Rosen Jacob3

Affiliation:

1. Electrical and Computer Engineering, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708 e-mail:

2. Computer Engineering, University of California, Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA 95064 e-mail:

3. Bionics Lab, Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095 e-mail:

Abstract

Surgical procedures are traditionally performed by two or more surgeons along with staff nurses: one serves as the primary surgeon and the other as his/her assistant. Introducing surgical robots into the operating room has significantly changed the dynamics of interaction between the surgeons and with the surgical site. In this paper, we design a surgical robotic system to support the collaborative operation of multiple surgeons. This Raven IV surgical robotic system has two pairs of articulated robotic arms with a spherical configuration, each arm holding an articulated surgical tool. It allows two surgeons to teleoperate the Raven IV system collaboratively from two remote sites. To optimize the mechanism design of the Raven IV system, we configure the link architecture of each robotic arm, along with the position and orientation of the four bases and the port placement with respect to the patient's body. The optimization considers seven different parameters, which results in 2.3×1010 system configurations. We optimize the common workspace and the manipulation dexterity of each robotic arm. We study here the effect of each individual parameter and conduct a brute force search to find the optimal set of parameters. The parameters for the optimized configuration result in an almost circular common workspace with a radius of 150 mm, accessible to all four arms.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

Reference18 articles.

1. Selha, S., Dupont, P., Howe, R., and Torchiana, D., 2001, “Dexterity Optimization by Port Placement in Robot-Assisted Minimally Invasive Surgery,” Proc. SPIE, 4570, pp. 97–10410.1117/12.454734.

2. Port Placement Planning in Robot-Assisted Coronary Artery Bypass;IEEE Trans. Rob. Autom.,2003

3. Trejos, A., and Patel, R., 2005, “Port Placement for Endoscopic Cardiac Surgery Based on Robot Dexterity Optimization,” IEEE International Conference on Robotics & Automation (ROBOT), Barcelona, Spain, Apr. 18–22, pp. 912–917.10.1109/ROBOT.2005.1570233

4. Optimal Port Placement and Enhanced Guidance in Robotically Assisted Cardiac Surgery;Surg. Endoscopy,2007

5. Optimization of a Novel Mechanism for a Minimally Invasive Surgery Robot;Int. J. Med. Rob. Comput. Assisted Surg.,2010

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