Grasp Stability Analysis with Passive Reactions
Maximilian Haas-Heger

TL;DR
This paper develops new tools for analyzing passive grasp stability in robotic hands, introducing polynomial-time algorithms for planar grasps and convex relaxations for spatial cases, enhancing practical manipulation capabilities.
Contribution
It presents the first polynomial runtime algorithm for passive stability of planar grasps and a convex relaxation approach for spatial grasps, broadening grasp analysis applicability.
Findings
Efficient polynomial-time algorithm for planar grasp stability.
Convex relaxation method for spatial grasp stability.
Framework applicable to robotic manipulation and assembly stability.
Abstract
[...] We argue that the traditional grasp modeling theory assumes a complexity that most robotic hands do not possess and is therefore of limited applicability to the robotic hands commonly used today. We discuss these limitations of the existing grasp modeling literature and set out to develop our own tools for the analysis of passive effects in robotic grasping. We show that problems of this kind are difficult to solve due to the non-convexity of the Maximum Dissipation Principle (MDP), which is part of the Coulomb friction law. We show that for planar grasps the MDP can be decomposed into a number of piecewise convex problems, which can be solved for efficiently. [...] Thus, we present the first polynomial runtime algorithm for the determination of passive stability of planar grasps. For the spacial case we [...] describe a convex relaxation of the Coulomb friction law and a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProtein Structure and Dynamics
