Human operated, hydraulic actuated machines are widely used in many high-power applications. Improving productivity, safety and task quality (e.g., haptic feedback in a teleoperated scenario) has been the focus of past research. For robotic systems that interact with the physical environments, passivity is a useful property for ensuring safety and interaction stability. While passivity is a well utilized concept in electromechanical robotic systems, investigation of electrohydraulic control systems that enforce this passivity property are rare. This paper proposes and experimentally demonstrates a teleoperation control algorithm that renders a hydraulic backhoe/force feedback joystick system as a two-port, coordinated, passive machine. By fully accounting for the fluid compressibility, inertia dynamics and nonlinearity, coordination performance is much improved over a previous scheme in which the coordination control approximates the hydraulic system by its kinematic behavior. This is accomplished by a novel bond graph based three step design methodology: (1) energetically invariant transformation of the system into a pair of “shape” and “locked” subsystems; (2) inversion of the shape system bond graph to derive the coordination control law; (3) use of the locked system bond graph to derive an appropriate control law to achieve a target locked system dynamics while ensuring the passivity property of the coordinated system. The proposed passive control law has been experimentally verified for its bilateral energy transfer ability and performance enhancements.
Skip Nav Destination
e-mail: kailash.kvishnaswamy@honeywell.com
e-mail: pli@me.umn.edu
Article navigation
March 2006
Technical Briefs
Bond Graph Based Approach to Passive Teleoperation of a Hydraulic Backhoe
Kailash Krishnaswamy,
e-mail: kailash.kvishnaswamy@honeywell.com
Kailash Krishnaswamy
Honeywell Labs
, 3660 Technology Dr., Minneapolis, MN 55418
Search for other works by this author on:
Perry Y. Li
Perry Y. Li
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
e-mail: pli@me.umn.edu
University of Minnesota
, 111 Church St. SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455
Search for other works by this author on:
Kailash Krishnaswamy
Honeywell Labs
, 3660 Technology Dr., Minneapolis, MN 55418e-mail: kailash.kvishnaswamy@honeywell.com
Perry Y. Li
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
University of Minnesota
, 111 Church St. SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455e-mail: pli@me.umn.edu
J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control. Mar 2006, 128(1): 176-185 (10 pages)
Published Online: November 19, 2005
Article history
Received:
March 15, 2005
Revised:
November 19, 2005
Citation
Krishnaswamy, K., and Li, P. Y. (November 19, 2005). "Bond Graph Based Approach to Passive Teleoperation of a Hydraulic Backhoe." ASME. J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control. March 2006; 128(1): 176–185. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2168475
Download citation file:
Get Email Alerts
Reinforcement Learning-Based Tracking Control for Two Time-Scale Looper Hydraulic Servo Systems
J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control (November 2023)
A Load Control Strategy for Stable Operation of Free-Piston Electromechanical Hybrid Power System
J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control (November 2023)
A Distributed Multiparticle Precise Stopping Control Model Based on the Distributed Model Predictive Control Algorithm for High-Speed Trains
J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control (November 2023)
Performance of Position, Force, and Impedance Controllers for a Pneumatic Cylinder Ankle Exoskeleton
J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control (November 2023)
Related Articles
Small-Scale Hydraulics for Human Assist Devices
J. Med. Devices (June,2011)
Flatness-Based High Frequency Control of a Hydraulic Actuator
J. Dyn. Sys., Meas., Control (March,2012)
An Experimental Study of Haptic Feedback in a Teleoperated Assembly Task
J. Comput. Inf. Sci. Eng (December,2008)
The Use of Derivative Pressure Feedback in High Performance Hydraulic Servomechanisms
J. Eng. Ind (February,1962)
Related Chapters
Hydraulics of Rotary Drilling
Oilwell Drilling Engineering
Introduction
Hydraulic Fluids: A Guide to Selection, Test Methods and Use
Disposal, Regulations, Reclamation, and Rerefining
Hydraulic Fluids: A Guide to Selection, Test Methods and Use