Dynamic Motion Planning for Robots in Partially Unknown Environments*

Authors: Sami Haddadin, Rico Belder, Alin Albu-Sch√§ffer

Published in: IFAC Proceedings Volumes, vol. 44, no. 1 (2011)

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3182/20110828-6-IT-1002.02500

No images available.

Abstract

No abstract available.

Tags

No tag(s) or keyword(s) available.

Videos

No video(s) available.

Downloads

No additional files.

BibTeX

If you want to cite this work, you can use the following BibTeX file:

@article{HaddadinBA11,
  title = {Dynamic Motion Planning for Robots in Partially Unknown Environments*},
  journal = {IFAC Proceedings Volumes},
  volume = {44},
  number = {1},
  pages = {6842-6850},
  year = {2011},
  note = {18th IFAC World Congress},
  issn = {1474-6670},
  doi = {https://doi.org/10.3182/20110828-6-IT-1002.02500},
  url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1474667016447051},
  author = {Sami Haddadin and Rico Belder and Alin Albu-Sch√§ffer},
  abstract = {Abstract
  In both domestic and also industrial settings robotic Co-Workers are expected to become a commodity. Even though the particular application areas may vastly change, a robot always needs to act in a dynamic and partially unknown environment. It shall reactively generate motions and prevent upcoming collisions. If contact is desired or inevitable, it has to handle it robustly and safely. For preventing collisions in a real-time fashion the Circular Fields method is a powerful scheme, which we developed further and evaluated extensively. After an initial analysis in rather complex 2D simulations, we extend the evaluation to 3D as well as 6D, where we introduce a hybrid strategy based on Circular and Potential Fields. Finally, the 6D implementation of a hybrid Circular & Potential Fields approach is used to perform the experimental analysis for static multi-object parcours and to avoid a dynamically moving human in a 6D task motion. Based on the algorithms for collision avoidance we also develop and experimentally verify an algorithm for tactile exploration of complex planar 3D wire elements, whose structure is a-priori unknown.}
}