Robot-Assisted Drilling on Curved Surfaces with Haptic Guidance under Adaptive Admittance Control
Alireza Madani, Pouya P. Niaz, Berk Guler, Yusuf Aydin, Cagatay, Basdogan

TL;DR
This paper presents a haptic-guided robotic drilling system on curved surfaces using adaptive admittance control, enhancing precision and safety in manufacturing tasks with minimal operator effort.
Contribution
It introduces an adaptive admittance controller for a cobot that enables effective haptic guidance and alignment during drilling on complex curved surfaces.
Findings
Improved drilling accuracy with haptic guidance.
Enhanced operator comfort and reduced fatigue.
Positive user feedback on system usability.
Abstract
Drilling a hole on a curved surface with a desired angle is prone to failure when done manually, due to the difficulties in drill alignment and also inherent instabilities of the task, potentially causing injury and fatigue to the workers. On the other hand, it can be impractical to fully automate such a task in real manufacturing environments because the parts arriving at an assembly line can have various complex shapes where drill point locations are not easily accessible, making automated path planning difficult. In this work, an adaptive admittance controller with 6 degrees of freedom is developed and deployed on a KUKA LBR iiwa 7 cobot such that the operator is able to manipulate a drill mounted on the robot with one hand comfortably and open holes on a curved surface with haptic guidance of the cobot and visual guidance provided through an AR interface. Real-time adaptation of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTeleoperation and Haptic Systems · Robot Manipulation and Learning · Manufacturing Process and Optimization
