After a Decade of Teleimpedance

A Survey

More Info
expand_more

Abstract

Despite the significant progress made in making robots more intelligent and autonomous, today, teleoperation remains a dominant robot control paradigm for the execution of complex and highly unpredictable tasks. Attempts have been made to make teleoperation systems stable, easy to use, and efficient in terms of physical interactions between the follower remote robot and the environment. In particular, the emergence of torque-controlled robots has permitted to regulate the interaction forces from a distance through direct force or impedance control, enabling them to engage in complex interaction tasks. Exploiting this feature, the concept of teleimpedance control was introduced as an alternative method to bilateral force-reflecting teleoperation. The aim was to create a feed-froward yet contact-efficient teleoperation by enriching the leader commands with desired impedance profiles while executing a task. Since then, the teleimpedance concept has found its way into a wide range of interface and controller designs, as well as application domains. Accordingly, after a decade of research progress, this survey aims to provide: first, a convenient introduction of the concept to new researchers in the field, second, consolidate the existing state-of-the-art for active researchers, third, and discuss the pros and cons of different methods in terms of interface and force feedback to provide guidelines for different applications and future developments.

Files

After_a_Decade_of_Teleimpedanc... (pdf)
(pdf | 1.77 Mb)
- Embargo expired in 30-06-2023
Unknown license