The present invention generally relates to parallel mechanism in automated fiber placement for aerospace part manufacturing.
Automated fiber placement (AFP) is an important manufacturing process in composite aerospace part manufacturing and has attracted much interest since future aircraft programs, such as the Boeing 787 and Airbus A350XWB, contain more than 50% by weight of advanced composite components. Also, the use of robot manipulators increases the flexibility of the fiber placement process and allows for the fabrication of more complex structures. Existing AFP research discusses productivity, steering and control, processing conditions, materials, layup modeling and simulation, and functional integration. Robotics work mainly focuses on path planning for AFP while typically a point-cloud is generated for the AFP head to follow to lay the material onto the mold.
Although many robot based AFP systems have been proposed and studied, this technology is still not widely used in industry where manual lay-up is still the main method due to cost constraints and level of complexity of molds. Furthermore, all previous work used serial robots as operation arms to hold the fiber placement head due to the fact that they are widely developed and used in automatic industry. However, serial robots generally have low stiffness and large inertia due to their serially connected structure, which affects their force and precision performance in high-compact-force applications, like AFP. In contrast to serial robots, parallel robots have multiple support limbs with low inertia, high structure stiffness, good positioning accuracy and high speeds. Based on this, they are widely used in the industrial applications requiring high speed and stiffness. Thus in this paper for the first time, a parallel mechanism is introduced in AFP and an optimal design is proposed as a basis for AFP.
In general a 6DOF platform is needed for the AFP operation to have flexibility in manufacturing all kinds of parts with complex mold surfaces. Considering the need of a moving platform to support the parallel mechanism and spindle rotation of the placement head on the parallel mechanism, a 4DOF parallel mechanism with 2T2R (two translations and two rotations) will be sufficient for automated fiber placement. In parallel mechanism research, 6DOF ones have been studied extensively with the Stewart-Gough platform with later focus moving to parallel mechanisms with less than 6DOF represented by many 3DOF ones. Due to the complexity of coupling between rotation and translation and singularity issues, 4DOF parallel mechanisms have not been investigated much and related work is mainly on synthesis. A class of asymmetrical 2T2R parallel mechanisms was synthesized in while symmetrical ones were obtained in using screw theory. Focusing on two rotation motions, and synthesized new 2T2R parallel mechanisms using general function set and Lie group theory respectively. Considering the requirement of a moving base (one translation) and a rotating spindle (one rotation), 2T2R parallel platforms have been used in 5- or 6-axis machine tools. A 2PRR-2PUS parallel mechanism with a moving platform formed by two parts joined with a revolute joint was proposed for a 5-axis machine tool. Reachable workspace of a 2PSS-2PUS parallel mechanism with two spherical joints coincided was studied in for machine tool applications while four possible singularity configurations of a 2UPR-2UPS parallel mechanism were obtained in. Recently, for needle manipulation tasks a class of 2T2R parallel mechanisms were synthesized using screw theory. However, little work has been found on singularity-free workspace analysis and optimal design of 2T2R parallel mechanisms.
Therefore, the object of the present invention is a 2T2R parallel mechanism is for automated fiber placement where the motion is realized by a 2RPS-2UPS topology. The mechanism size is mainly determined by the two RPS (revolute-prismatic-spherical joints) limbs. Finding the optimized locations of the two UPS (universal-prismatic-spherical joints) limbs is the main objective in the optimal design for giving a large singularity-free workspace and good kinematics performance represented by the condition number of a dimensionless Jacobian matrix. To compare the workspace volume for translation and rotation, an angle-based 3D space is proposed to have a uniform unit by representing the translations in rotations. An optimized mechanism configuration is found and the effect of joint components is also demonstrated, resulting in a practical design for AFP and other applications.
Although many robot based Automated Fiber Placement (AFP) systems have been proposed and used in composites manufacturing industry, but parallel robots are still not used in composites manufacturing. Furthermore, all the previous work applied serial robots as operation arms to hold the fiber placement head due to the fact that they are widely developed and used in automatic industry. However, serial robots generally have low stiffness and large inertia due to their serially connected structure, which affects their force and precision performance in high-compact-force applications, like AFP. In contrast to serial robots, parallel robots may decrease the weight of lay-up heads, offer multiple support limbs with low inertia, high structure stiffness, good positioning accuracy and high speeds.
The proposed 2T2R (two translation and two rotation) parallel mechanism consists of two RPS (revolute joint, prismatic joint and spherical joint) limbs and two UPS (universal joint, prismatic joint and spherical joint) limbs. In each limb, the revolute or universal joint is attached to the base while the spherical joint is on the platform, and prismatic joints are connected in between. The two revolute joints in the RPS limbs are located parallel to each other on the base and make the two limbs work in the same plane perpendicular to these revolute joints. Joints on the platform or base are in 3D space and not constrained on the same plane (the example in the paper made all joints on the plane). All the joints in the system can be commercialized ones or customer designed. For example, the prismatic joint can be electric, hydraulic, pneumatic, or any other forms that can provide linear motion with enough power. The spherical joints can be ball joint or serially connected revolute joints and the universal joint can be cross-link connected or serially connected revolute joints.
The 4-DOF Parallel Mechanism can be combined with a moving base to increase the workspace and add one rotational motion to AFP head on the moving platform to form a 6-DOF system for automated fiber placement manufacturing process. The system can be used to lay-up very complex parts with the ability to adjust to any kind of reinforcing fibers and matrix materials such as thermoset and thermoplastic tapes/prepregs and dry carbon fiber unidirectional materials.
In addition to AFP manufacturing, the proposed mechanism can also be used in many applications with motion operation, like camera orientation, material grasping and manipulation, machining tool, laser cutting, 3D printing, stabilization platform, motion simulator, automatic painting, automatic welding, Non Destructive Testing (NDT) etc.
As a first aspect of the invention, there is provided a robot apparatus comprising:
Preferably, the parallel mechanism is adapted to be used for composites manufacturing.
Preferably, the parallel mechanism is adapted to operate an Automated Fiber Placement Head (AFP).
Preferably, the parallel mechanism provides a 4 Degree-Of-Freedom (DOF) movement comprising two rotations and two translations.
Preferably, the prismatic joints are adapted to provide linear motion with enough power.
Preferably, the prismatic joints are electric, hydraulic or pneumatic.
Preferably, the spherical joints are ball joint or serially connected revolute joints.
Preferably, the universal joints are cross-link connected or serially connected revolute joints.
Preferably, the robot further comprises
Preferably, the two revolute joints in the RPS limbs are located parallel to each other on to the base and adapted to make the two limbs work in the same plane perpendicular to the revolute joints.
Preferably, the joints are in 3D space and not constrained on the same plane.
Preferably, the base is movable enabling a 6 degree-of-freedom movement for the parallel mechanism.
Preferably, the robot apparatus further comprises an Automated Fiber Placement Head (AFP) adapted to be connected to the base.
Preferably, the robot apparatus is adapted for use in composites manufacturing.
Preferably, the robot apparatus is adapted to reinforce fibers and matrix materials comprising thermoset and thermoplastic tapes or prepregs and dry carbon fiber unidirectional materials.
Preferably, the robot apparatus is adapted for use in camera orientation, material grasping and manipulation, machining tool, laser cutting, 3D printing, stabilization platform, motion simulator, automatic painting, automatic welding or non destructive testing.
The advantages and features of the present invention will become better understood with reference to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
2. A 2T2R Parallel Mechanism Based AFP System
In AFP systems, fiber tows are guided by a fiber-processing head attached to the end-effector of a robot and carefully placed following a pre-defined robot trajectory as in
Considering one translation DOF giving by a moving base to enlarge the workspace and one rotation DOF from AFP head on the moving platform, a parallel mechanism with two translational and two rotational DOFs is sufficient to avoid redundant movement. The proposed AFP system is shown in
The proposed 2T2R parallel mechanism consists of two RPS limbs and two UPS limbs as shown in
The initial assumption of this study is that the two RPS limbs are relatively fixed while the two UPS limbs can be freely chosen. This will result in variable configurations with different singularity-free workspace and kinematics performance. Thus the following study shows a method of optimizing locations of the two UPS limbs with respect to the RPS limbs and the sizes of the platform and base, to get maximum singularity-free workspace with acceptable kinematics properties.
3. The 2T2R Parallel Mechanism and Analytical Inverse and Forward Kinematics Analysis:
3.1 Variable Configurations of the 2RPS-2UPS Parallel Mechanism and its Kinematics Model:
A representative kinematics model of the 2RPS-2UPS parallel mechanism is shown in
Let ai denote the constant position vector of platform joint center Ai in the platform coordinate frame o′x′y′z′ and bi be the constant vector of base joint center Bi expressed in the base coordinate frame oxyz. Then the limb distance constraints can be described as
where li is the length of limb i, R is the 3 by 3 rotation matrix covering two rotations about x-axis and y-axis, p=(0,py,pz)T is the translation vector of point o′ in the base coordinate system oxyz, ai is the distance from point Ai to o′ and ϕai is its angle in the platform coordinate frame measured from x′-axis, bi is the distance from point Bi to o and ϕbi is its angle in the base coordinate frame measured from x-axis. Based on the configuration, ϕb2=ϕa2=π/2, ϕb4=ϕa4=3π/2, a2=a4=a, b2=b4=b, a1=a3, b1=b3 will be used in the optimization design.
Equation (1) gives the general geometric constraint of the 2RPS-2UPS parallel mechanism. It is noted that given R and p the inverse kinematic solution can be obtained directly from (1) to give the four input limb lengths li. The forward kinematics analysis in general is more complex and the following Section shows an analytical solution.
3.2 Analytical Forward Kinematics:
Based on the geometric structure of the mechanism in
where ai (i=2,4) is the angle between limb i and line B2B4 as in
Then considering the geometric shape of the platform and limb lengths, the following equations exist:
where the first one represents the distance between spherical joint A2 and A4, the second one describes the angle ∠A1o′A2, the third one is the distance between spherical joint center A3 and the point o′, the fourth and the fifth are the limb length expressions of limb 1 and limb 3 which are the same with (1).
Substituting (2) into (3) gives
where fi(•) is a linear function of (x1, y1, z1)and include cosine and sine functions of the angle ai.
The last three equations in (4) are linear functions of (x12, y12, z12). Then two new equations can be obtained from these three by eliminating (x12, y12, z12) as
Thus, (x1, y1, z1) can be eliminated from f2 in (4) and f6, f7 in (5). Substituting the results into f1, f4 and replacing cos αi=(1−ti2)/(1+ti2), sin αi=2ti/(1+ti2), gives
Following Sylvester's dialytic elimination method for the two equations in (6), a univariate equation in t4 of degree 32 is obtained:
where coefficient hi are real constants depending on constant mechanism parameters and input data only.
Solving (7), 32 solutions for t4 can be obtained. Then, t2 can be solved by substituting each solution of t4 back to the equations in (6) and solving the common roots. Following this, (x1, y1, z1) can be linearly solved by substituting each pair of solutions of t2 and t4 into f2 in (4) and f6, f7 in (5). Based on this, 32 sets of solutions of t2, t4 and (x1, y1, z1) are obtained and the spherical joint center Ai can be calculated by substituting αi=2 Arc Tan(ti) into (2). Then, the platform position and orientation can be determined using the three spherical joint centers as:
4. Jacobian Matrices and Singularity Loci for Maximum Singularity-Free Workspace:
4.1 Screw Theory Based Overall Jacobian Matrix:
The infinitesimal twist of the moving platform of the 2RPS-2UPS parallel mechanism can be written as a linear combination of instantaneous twists of each limb:
where Sp represents the infinitesimal twist of the moving platform, Sij (j=1,2,3,4,5,6) denotes the unit screw of the jth 1-DOF joint in limb i, {dot over (l)}i is the distance rate of the prismatic joint in limb i, and {dot over (ϕ)}ij (j=1,2,4,5,6) represent angular rates of the universal joint and spherical joint in limb i.
Thus by locking the active joints in the limbs temporarily and taking the reciprocal product on both sides of (9), four actuation reciprocal screws and two geometric constraint screws can be found to give the following expression:
where x=(1,0,0)T, ui is the unit vector of the ith limb direction, {dot over (l)}a represents a vector of the four linear input rates, Si1r (i=1,2,3,4) is the actuation screw reciprocal to all joint motion screws in the ith limb except the prismatic joint screw Si3 and it is collinear with the limb, Si2r (i=2,4) is the reciprocal screw of geometric constraint to all motion screws in limb i and it passes through the spherical joint center with the direction parallel to the revolute joint.
Thus J is the 6 by 6 overall Jacobian matrix. The first four rows are the four actuation forces represented by actuation Jacobian Ja in (10) while the last two rows are constraint forces denoted by constraint Jacobian Jc. The zero determinant of the overall Jacobian J represents singular velocity mappings and singular configurations of the parallel mechanism. Due to the some mechanism arrangement symmetry, like the limb 2 and limb 4, and the design that all joints are on the same plane for both the base and platform, the singularity equation from the determinant of the Jacobian J is simplified and further study can also consider the method in to have the potential to simplify the final equation.
4.2 Dimensionless Jacobian Matrix for Kinematics Performance Evaluation:
Since the 2RPS-2UPS parallel mechanism has two translational and two rotational motions, the actuation Jacobian Ja involves both linear and angular velocity mappings. Thus, its singular values are not in the same unit and its condition number cannot be used directly for kinematics performance evaluation. Following this, a dimensionless Jacobian matrix is introduced. One approach is to map the platform velocity to linear velocities in some directions at selected points on the platform representing the platform mobility. This mapping provides a uniform unit between the linear platform point velocities and linear actuation limb inputs. Considering the motion type of the 2RPS-2UPS parallel mechanism, four linear velocities at three points on the platform are selected,
To present the two translational motion of the platform along y-axis and z-axis, linear velocities along n1=(0,1,0)T and n2=(0,0,1)T at point O′ are selected. For the two rotation motions about x-axis and y-axis, linear velocities along n3=(0,1,0)T at point P3 and along n4=(0,0,1)T at point P4 are selected. Then these linear velocities can be expressed by the platform velocity in the platform coordinate frame as:
vp=[v1 v2 v3 v4]T=Jp MT Sp 11
where vi is the linear velocity along ni at the selected point,
pi is the vector of point i at which linear velocities are selected and p1=p2=(0,0,0)T, p3=(0,0,a1)T, p4=(−a1,0,0)T.
From (10), there is
Sp=(JT J)−1 JaT {dot over (l)}a 12
Combining (11) and (12), the selected linear velocities can be obtained directly from the linear actuation input velocities:
vp=Jp MT (JT J)−1 JaT {dot over (l)}a=JD−1 {dot over (l)}a 13
where JD=(Jp MT (JT J)−1 JaT)−1 is the 4×4 dimensionless Jacobian matrix.
4.3 Parameterization and Singularity Loci:
From section 4.1, the overall Jacobian matrix J maps the velocities between the manipulator and the actuation input while satisfying the geometric constraints. Once the manipulator meets the singular configuration, this mapping loses its function and the rank of the Jacobian matrix decreases to less than 6. This can be also interpreted that the four actuation forces and two constraint forces in J are linearly dependent. Inversely, identifying the dependent conditions for the constraint forces in the workspace will reveal the singular configurations of the manipulator. This can be analyzed by taking the determinant of J to be zero.
In order to illustrate the singularity loci in a uniform unit, the motion of the platform is described by two rotation angles (α, β) in the rotation matrix R and a lengths d and an angle θ in the translation vector p=(0,py,pz)T=d(0, cos(θ), sin(θ))T. For different length d, 3D singularity loci in the coordinates (α, β, θ) can be shown,
In
4.4 Maximum Singularity-Free Workspace:
Following the singularity loci in section 4.3, the maximum singularity free workspace is defined as the maximum workspace starting from the initial configuration (α=0, β=0, θ=π/2, variable d) to the first point meeting the singularity loci. An example with a given d is shown in
5. Maximum-Singularity-Free Workspace and Kinematics Performance Based Optimal Design:
5.1 Design Variables and Performance Indices:
As discussed in Section 2.1 and
For the kinematics performance, condition number ki=σmax/σmin, (σmax and σmin are the maximum and minimum singular values of the dimensionless Jacobian JD) is a widely used parameter in parallel mechanism design and optimization. As mentioned above, the condition number is calculated using the dimensionless Jacobian considering the coupled mapping with linear and angular velocities.
The optimal design of the 2RPS-2UPS parallel mechanism in this paper is to find the best parameter set to have maximum singularity-free workspace with good kinematics performance. Thus, the optimal design cost function can be given as:
where V is the maximum singularity-free workspace, k is the inverse average condition number in the workspace V and is between 0 and 1. The best kinematics performance corresponds to the value 1 when the velocity mapping is isotropic.
5.2 Optimal Design:
5.2.1 Effect of Parameters a1 and b1
Based on the above analysis, the maximum singularity-free workspace and kinematics performance are calculated with variable λa, λa1, and λb1 as shown in
5.2.2 Effect of Parameters ϕb1 and ϕa1
Parameters ϕb1 and ϕa1 represent the locations of the two ends of limb 1 on the platform and on the base. From
It is noted that parameters ϕb3 and ϕa3 have the same effect as ϕa1 and ϕb1, considering the symmetrical structure of the parallel mechanism and same form of limb 1 and limb 3. Thus, the above results from
5.2.3 Effect of Parameters ϕa1 and ϕa3
The two parameters ϕa1 and ϕa3 represent the locations of the spherical joints of limb 1 and limb 3 on the platform.
5.2.4 Effect of Parameters ϕb1 and ϕb3
The two parameters ϕb1 and ϕb3 represent the locations of the universal joints of limb 1 and limb 3 on the base. The result is shown in
To conclude the above analysis, the ratio (a/b) between the platform size (a) and the base size (b) should be small for both singularity-free workspace and kinematics performance. The spherical joints on the platform (a1) and universal joints on the base (b1) in limb 1 and limb 3 should be close to limb 2 and limb 4 to have large singularity-free workspace while they have to be crossed to give good kinematics performance. To compromise these and avoid limb interference, a “V” shape assembly of limb 1 and limb 3 can be obtained. For this, there are also two solutions while one is to assemble the two spherical joints on the platform close to each other and the other is to let the two universal joints on the base close to each other. However, comparing
6. An Optimized 2T2R Parallel Mechanism for AFP
In this section a design example is given by following the above optimization procedures. The previous section gives the whole map for mechanism design parameters for singularity-free workspace and kinematics performance. In specific design, effect from selected mechanical components on the maximum singularity-free workspace should be also figured out.
In general, the platform and base sizes (a and b) can be determined by considering the actual application requirement. To hold the fiber placement head, a minimum size of the platform should be used. Following the above analysis, this minimum size should be selected to have a small platform size over base size ratio (a/b) for large singularity-free workspace and good kinematics performance. The selection for the location of the limb 1 and limb 3 on the platform (a1) and on the base (b1) follows the rule shown in
where lmax and lmin represent the maximum and minimum limb lengths respectively while all the limbs have the same size. In the following an example will be given to optimize the selection of λl and ψmax based on the optimized mechanism configuration in
From
The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the present invention to the precise forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the present invention and its practical application, and to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the present invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is understood that various omissions and substitutions of equivalents are contemplated as circumstances may suggest or render expedient, but such omissions and substitutions are intended to cover the application or implementation without departing from the spirit or scope of the present invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5388935 | Sheldon | Feb 1995 | A |
20120073738 | Crothers | Mar 2012 | A1 |
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20160250749 A1 | Sep 2016 | US |
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62120952 | Feb 2015 | US |