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Trajectory Planning I (Point To Point and Continuous Trajectories)

Trajectory planning involves determining the motion of robot joints to move the end-effector along a specified path. There are two types of trajectory planning tasks: point-to-point, where the end-effector moves between discrete points; and continuous-path, where the end-effector follows a continuous trajectory. For both, the joint motions must be determined such that the end-effector moves through the specified points with the desired velocity, acceleration, and orientation within a specified time period. Directly controlling end-effector motion is challenging, so instead trajectory planning calculates the individual joint motions required to achieve the desired end-effector motion based on the robot's kinematics.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views

Trajectory Planning I (Point To Point and Continuous Trajectories)

Trajectory planning involves determining the motion of robot joints to move the end-effector along a specified path. There are two types of trajectory planning tasks: point-to-point, where the end-effector moves between discrete points; and continuous-path, where the end-effector follows a continuous trajectory. For both, the joint motions must be determined such that the end-effector moves through the specified points with the desired velocity, acceleration, and orientation within a specified time period. Directly controlling end-effector motion is challenging, so instead trajectory planning calculates the individual joint motions required to achieve the desired end-effector motion based on the robot's kinematics.

Uploaded by

rohit123445
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Trajectory planning I continuous trajectories)

point

to

point

and

Tasks of the first type are referred to as Point-to-Point while the second group of tasks is referred to as continuous-path type. In either case, the joints have to be moved such that the end-effector moves through the specified points in the workspace positioning the end-effector at appropriate orientation or passing through those points with desired velocity and/or acceleration within the specified time. Since a robot manipulator tip (i.e. end-effector) carries the tool that performs the desired tasks, it is observed that the end-effector, holding the welding gun, is required to follow a specific path strictly, in order to get a proper weld. The specification of the desired motion naturally occurs in terms of the goal position/orientation of the endeffector in space, its velocity etc. One could visualize a robot system with appropriate sensors that continuously track the global position/orientation etc. of the end-effector and feed these into a closed loop feed-back control system. For such a system, in principle, motion planning, generation and control could take place directly in terms of end-effector's desired motion in world coordinates. However, it must be observed that having to continuously measure the motion variables (such as position, orientation, velocity etc.) of the endeffector in space is not a trivial task. Most manipulators, on the other hand, have individual joint motion sensors that feed into a lower level control system at each joint. Thus we wish to find the individual joint motions required to achieve the desired end-effector motion. A trajectory would thus refer to the time history of position, velocity and acceleration of each individual d.o.f. The individual joint motions and the end-effector motion are of course related through the robot kinematics and can be converted from one to the other.

Consider, for example, a simple planar 2R manipulator as shown in Fig.12.1.3, respectively.

are the known link lengths of OA and AB

Trajectory planning II ( 4-3-4 & trapezoidal velocity strategy for robots)

Forward & inverse kinematics examples of 2R, 3R & 3P manipulators

Specifying position & orientation of rigid bodies

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