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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. Apparatus for sensing load forces exerted along at least selected axes
of a work performing mechanism having a driven input portion and a load
engaging output portion, said apparatus comprising:
means connecting said input and output portions for resilient relative
displacement along at least one given axis; and
means for detecting the relative displacement of said portions along a
direction at least parallel to said given axis so as to determine the load
forces acting in said direction on said output portion as a function of
said displacement and the resiliency of said connecting means, said
detecting means including a position sensing lateral effect photodiode
fixedly mounted with respect to one of said portions having a given
photosensitive surface extending in said direction, and means for
directing a spot of light to said photosensitive surface from a fixed
location with respect to the other of said portions such that the position
of said spot of light on the photosensitive surface of said photodiode is
a continuous function of the relative displacement of said portions in
said direction.
2. The invention of claim 1, wherein said connecting means includes at
least one elastomeric element extending generally transverse said given
axis with its ends mounted in fixed relation to respective ones of said
input and output portions, and said elastomeric element having a
relatively high longitudinal spring constant to essentially preclude
displacement of said portions along an axis normal to said given axis
under relatively heavy load forces acting along said normal axis and a
comparatively low lateral spring constant to permit displacement of said
portions along said given axis under comparatively light loads.
3. The invention of claim 2, wherein said work performing mechanism is a
robotic arm and said output portion is an extended member coupled by said
connecting means to said input portion, and said given axis is generally
normal to the longitudinal axis of said input portion.
4. The invention of claim 1, additionally including energizeable control
means for displacing said input portion, said control means including
means for controlling said displacement at least in directions parallel to
said given axis in accordance with displacement of said light spot on said
photodiode.
5. The invention of claim 4, wherein said control means includes means for
terminating further displacement of said input portion when said
displacement of said light spot from its no-load position on said
photodiode exceeds a given maximum distance.
6. The invention of claim 1, wherein said connecting means includes means
for permitting resilient relative displacement of said portions in at
least a given plane, and said position sensing photodiode includes a two
dimensional photosensitive surface extending in orthogonal directions in
said given plane so as to detect displacement over and load forces exerted
along said two dimensional area defined by said directions.
7. The invention of claim 6, wherein said photosensitive surface is a
planar member mounted in substantially parallel arrangement to said given
plane to detect displacement of and load forces acting on said output
portion along said given plane.
8. Force sensing apparatus for a robotic arm having a driven input member
and a load engaging output member, said apparatus comprising:
means connecting said members together for resilient relative displacement
in at least a given plane; and
means for detecting the relative displacement of said members in said given
plane so as to determine the load forces acting in said given plane on
said output member as a function of said displacement and the resiliency
of said connecting means in said given plane, said detecting means
including a position sensing lateral effect photodiode fixedly mounted
with respect to one of said members having a photosensitive surface that
extends in a direction parallel to said plane, and means for directing a
spot of light to said photodiode from a fixed location with respect to the
other of said members such that the position of said spot of light on said
photodiode is a function of the relative displacement of said members in
said direction.
9. The invention of claim 8, wherein said connecting means includes at
least one elastomeric element extending generally transverse said given
plane with its ends mounted in fixed relation to respective ones of said
input and output members, and said elastomeric element having a relatively
high longitudinal spring constant to essentially preclude displacement of
said members in a plane normal to said given plane under relatively heavy
load forces in said normal plane and a comparatively low lateral spring
constant to permit displacement of said members in said given plane under
comparatively light loads.
10. The invention of claim 9, wherein said input member is an extended
member and said given plane is essentially normal to the longitudinal axis
of said input member.
11. The invention of claim 10, additionally including energizeable control
means for displacing said arm, said control means including means for
controlling said arm displacement at least in directions parallel to said
given plane in accordance with displacement of said light spot on said
photodiode.
12. The invention of claim 11, wherein said control means includes means
for terminating further displacement of said arm when said displacement of
said light spot on said photodiode exceeds a given maximum distance.
13. Relative movement sensing apparatus, comprising:
a light source;
a first member;
a second member resiliently mounted on said first member, being relatively
movable with respect thereto;
a lateral effect photodiode having a light sensitive surface, said
photodiode being mounted in a fixed position with respect to one of said
members and including means for generating an electrical signal
representative of a relative position between said members; and
means for directing a portion of the light from said light source from a
particular location relative to the other of said members, to a particular
location on said light sensitive surface.
14. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein said means for directing a portion
of the light from said light source is a light-focusing lens.
15. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the means for resiliently mounting
said second member on said first member includes a high compliance spring
comprising a multiplicity of flat discs with each of said discs having a
flat surface thereof adjacent the flat surface of another disc, the disc
surfaces being generally orthogonal to a particular axial direction with
said discs being encapsulated in an elastomeric material such that forces
applied to said spring lateral to said axial direction can produce
significant disc movement in said lateral direction and only negligible
disc movement along said particular axial direction.
16. Robot arm drive force interrupting apparatus, comprising:
a light source;
an energizeable robot arm drive member;
a robot arm driven member resiliently mounted on said drive member, being
relatively movable with respect thereto;
a lateral effect photodiode having a light sensitive surface, said
photodiode being mounted in a fixed position with respect to one of said
members and including means for generating an electrical signal
representative of a relative position between said members;
means for directing a portion of the light from said light source from a
particular location relative to the other of said members, to a particular
location on said light sensitive surface; and
means responsive to said relative position signal for disabling said robot
arm drive member when said signal is greater than or equal to a
predetermined magnitude.
17. Drive force magnitude regulating apparatus, comprising:
a light source;
an energizeable drive member;
a driven member mounted on said drive member through a spring member having
a known spring rate, said driven member being movable with respect to said
drive member;
a lateral effect photodiode having a light sensitive surface, said
photodiode being mounted in a fixed position with respect to one of said
members and including means for generating an electrical signal
representative of a relative position between said members;
means for directing a portion of the light from said light source from a
particular location relative to the other of said members, to a particular
location on said light sensitive surface; and
means responsive to said relative position signal for controlling the
movement of said drive member to thereby control the magnitude of the
drive force provided by said driven member.
18. The apparatus of claim 13, wherein the means for resiliently mounting
said second member on said first member includes a plurality of compliant
pads.
19. The apparatus of claims 16 or 17, wherein the means for mounting said
second member on said first member includes a plurality of compliant pads. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to positioning apparatus, in general, and to
apparatus for controlling the movement of a positioning or force
generating device commonly referred to as an industrial robot, in
particular.
Automated product assembly machines, for example, have been employed in
manufacturing industries for a great number of years. More recently,
though, technologically more sophisticated machines have been employed for
such purposes. These more recent machines are commonly referred to as
industrial robots. Industrial robots are capable of performing various
mechanical operations with a high degree of speed and accuracy in response
to a set of programmed instructions.
Common uses for industrial robots include the movement of a workpiece from
one position to another and the performance of repetitive operations with
a high degree of precision. The use of industrial robots in place of human
personnel has proven very beneficial in that they have resulted in both
cost reductions and processing accuracy and have relieved many personnel
from performing routine and/or potentially hazardous jobs. Industrial
robots are also employed in numerous other fields of technology to perform
a variety of different operations.
A significant problem associated with industrial robots, especially those
employed for product assembly purposes, is their inability to recognize
when they collide or make contact with objects located in their paths of
travel when moving to perform programmed tasks. Inasmuch as most
industrial robots are capable of generating extremely large physical
forces, such forces can seriously damage or even destroy such contacted
objects, objects that have heretofore been undetectable when struck or
contacted by any portion of a moving robot. A typical object damaging
situation often occurs when an industrial robot is programmed to place a
series of identical objects or piece-parts into fairly close tolerance
openings or recesses in, for example, a series of identical housings,
during product assembly, over an extended period of time. During this
extended period of product assembly time, a gradual misalignment will
often result between, for example, the center of the housing opening and
the center of the piece-part that is being inserted into the housing
opening, misalignment that has heretofore been undetectable. The
consequences of the robot being unable to detect such misalignment often
is damage to the piece-part, to the housing or to the robot itself because
of the large physical forces likely to be involved as the robot blindly
attempts to place a piece-part in a misaligned housing opening where it is
incapable of detecting such misalignment.
A primary object of the present invention is to provide apparatus for
detecting relative movement between members that are resiliently attached
to one another.
Another object of the present invention is to provide apparatus for
determining when a portion of an industrial robot arm comes in contact
with a robot arm-motion impeding object.
Another object of the present invention is to provide apparatus for
terminating movement of an industrial robot whenever a portion of said
robot strikes or comes in contact with a movement-impeding object.
A further object of the present invention is to provide apparatus that will
enable an industrial robot to apply a predetermined physical force to a
particular object or workpiece such as when components are required to be
forced together during product assembly.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide apparatus for
accurately determining the initial or null position of a robot hand for
minimum time consuming, initial robot hand position-describing, robot arm
programming purposes.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will be
readily apparent from the following description of the preferred
embodiment thereof taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with the teachings of the present invention, apparatus is
provided for determining when a relatively movable driven member moves out
of positional alignment with respect to a drive member. The apparatus
includes means for resiliently attaching said members to one another such
that they are maintained in a predetermined positional relationship
relative to one another. An optically focused light source is mounted in a
particular location on one member and a light sensitive device capable of
continuously generating a member-to-member relative position signal in
response to focused light from said light source striking the light
sensitive surface of said light sensitive device, is mounted on the other
member. Relative movement between said resiliently attached members causes
said light sensitive device to generate an electrical signal
representative of the extent of member-to-member relative movement. This
signal may be employed to, for example, terminate drive member movement,
cause a particular force to be applied to an object by said movable member
or to facilitate the programming of a robot arm.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a perspective view of a conventional industrial robot
incorporating the relative movement sensing apparatus of the present
invention.
FIG. 2 is an enlarged elevational view, partly in section, of the relative
movement sensing apparatus shown in FIG. 1.
FIG. 3A is an exploded perspective view of the relative motion sensing
apparatus shown in drawing FIG. 2.
FIG. 3B is a sectional view, in elevation, of one of the spring-like
compliant pads in the relative motion sensing apparatus of the present
invention.
FIG. 4A is a schematic diagram of the initial position of a portion of an
axially misaligned piece-part inserting robot arm incorporating the
relative motion sensing apparatus of the present invention.
FIG. 4B is a schematic diagram showing the apparatus of FIG. 4 partially
inserting the piece-part into a mating piece-part receiving opening.
FIG. 5A is a schematic diagram of the initial position of a portion of a
piece-part inserting robot arm holding the piece-part at an acute angle to
a piece-part receiving opening.
FIG. 5B is a schematic diagram showing the apparatus of FIG. 5A partially
inserting the piece part into a mating piece-part receiving opening.
FIG. 6A is a cross-sectional view, in schematic, of the photosensitive
device employed in the relative motion sensing apparatus of the present
invention.
FIG. 6B is a schematic diagram of the external housing of a dual axis
photodiode showing four external electrical connections and showing the X
and Y coordinates of its light sensitive surface.
FIG. 7 is an information flow block diagram of the motion sensing apparatus
of the present invention operating in its position sensing mode of
operation.
FIG. 8 is an information flow block diagram of the motion sensing apparatus
of the present invention operating in its force generating/sensing mode of
operation.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
In FIG. 1 of the drawings, conventional industrial robot or robot arm
assembly 10 incorporating a preferred embodiment of the present invention,
is depicted. Robot arm assembly 10 is a PUMA Model 600 that is
manufactured by Unimation, Inc. of Danbury, Conn. Robot arm assembly 10
operates in accordance with an anthropomorphic coordinate system having
six degrees of freedom with portions of said assembly being capable of
limited rotational movement about axes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Robot arm
assembly 10 includes pedestal 22 having pedestal axis 12 about which all
of the upper portions of assembly 10 can be rotated. In addition, lower
arm 24 which is rotatably attached to pedestal 22, is rotatable about
lower arm axis 14. Upper arm 26 which is rotatably attached to lower arm
24, is rotatable about upper arm axis 16. Wrist joint 28 is rotatable
about two mutually orthoginal axes 18 and 20, said joint being tiltable
with respect to upper arm 26 and pivotable about axis 20 which is the axis
about which pneumatically actuated workpiece-holding gripper 30 is
rotated. Gripper 30 is resiliently attached to said wrist joint 28 by
relative movement sensing apparatus 32 of the present invention. Sensing
apparatus 32 senses relative movement between wrist joint 28 and
work-piece holding gripper 30 and generates an electrical signal
representative of such relative movement. Robot assembly 10 is programmed
by the so-called training method, i.e., gripper 30, that is resiliently
attached to upper arm 26 through sensing apparatus 32 is manually moved to
the desired gripper position(s) whereupon the coordinates of this
particular gripper 30 position are stored in a memory established in robot
control assembly 34 for the control of robot assembly 10.
As noted above, pneumatically actuated gripper 30 is resiliently attached
to upper arm 26 through or by means of relative motion sensing apparatus
32 which incorporates the preferred embodiment of the inventive concept of
the present invention. Relative motion sensing apparatus 32 will now be
described in detail. An enlarged elevational view of motion sensing
apparatus 32 is shown in drawing FIG. 2 and an exploded perspective view
of said apparatus 32 is shown in drawing FIG. 3A. With reference to
drawing FIGS. 2 and 3A, photodiode housing 36, lateral effect photodiode
38 and backplate 40 are attached to flange portion 42 of wrist joint 28 by
a pair of mounting screws (only screw 44 shown). Photodiode 38 is nested
in a recess in one side of housing 36 and the opposite side of housing 36
engages said flange portion 42 of wrist joint 28. Photodiode 38 is a
conventional dual-axis (X and Y) lateral effect photodiode that is
available from United Detector Technology of Culver City, Calif. Backplate
40, having a pair of mounting screw accepting openings 46A and 46B
therein, engages the photodiode recess side of housing 36, thereby
sandwiching photodiode 38 between housing 36 and backplate 40 when
mounting screws 44, etc. extend through said openings 46A, 46B, through
corresponding openings 48A and 48B in photodiode housing 36 and are fully
threaded into cooperating threaded openings in wrist joint flange portion
42.
Front plate 50 is resiliently mounted on back plate 40 by a set of three
spring-like, laterally resilient, compliant pads (only two, 52A and 52B,
are shown). These compliant pads are commercially available from Lord
Kinematic of Erie, Pa. A sectional view of one of said spring-like
compliant pads, pad 52A, is shown in drawing FIG. 3B. Pad 52A in drawing
FIG. 3B consists of a plurality of flat, uniformly stacked, laminated
steel disks 53A, 53B, etc., with each disk having a flat surface thereof
adjacent another of said disks and with all of said disks being capsulated
in an elastomeric material. Compliant pad 52A also includes a pair of
mounting caps at the opposite ends thereof having threaded openings
therein for mounting the compliant pad to back plate 40 and front plate
50. The ends of compliant pad 52A, for example, are inserted into recesses
56A and 56B in back plate 40 and in front plate 50, respectively, and is
attached to said plate by screws 58A and 58B, respectively. The other two
compliant pads are mounted to plates 40 and 50 in different plate recesses
in the same manner. Compliant pads 52A, 52B, etc., are relatively
incompressible or will experience only negligible deformation when force
is applied normal to said flat surfaces of each stacked disk, but are
flexible or are deformable when shear forces are applied in directions
generally lateral to said compressive forces. Laminated elastomeric
spring-like compliant pads 52A, 52B, etc., provide multidirectional
flexibility, with a chosen or tailored spring constant, in the required
directions. These commercially available pads do not require lubrication,
require no adjustment, have low hysteresis, can take a fair amount of
abuse and have a long life.
High intensity infrared light emitting diode 60 and optical lens 62 are
mounted in a fixed position in diode/lens support housing 64. Other light
sources such as lasers, laser diodes, non-infrared light emitting diodes
or incandescent and fluorescent lamps may also be employed as light
sources in place of diode 60. Support housing 64 is positioned in recess
66 in front plate 50 and said housing is fixedly attached to said plate 50
by screws 68A and 68B that pass through openings in tabs 70A and 70B,
respectively, projecting from said housing 64 and into threaded openings
in said front plate 50. In this position infrared light from housing 64
mounted light emitting diode 60 is focused by conventional optical lens
62, in the shape of a relatively small circular spot, on light sensitive
surface 72 of lateral effect photodiode 38. Pneumatic housing portion 74
of pneumatically actuated gripper 30 is attached to diode/lens support
housing 64 by a pair of screws 76A and 76B that pass through openings in
pneumatic housing 74 of gripper 30 and into threaded openings in said
housing 64. Gripper 30 includes a pair of fingers 78A and 78B that move
toward each other for work-piece gripping purposes when tube 80 is
pressurized from a pressure source (not shown) by the actuation of a
pressure control valve (not shown) in response to a signal from robot arm
control system 34 (FIG. 1).
Movement sensing apparatus 32 is, in part, a compliant device that performs
around the point about which rotation will occur when a moment is applied
and pure translation occurs when a force is applied to said apparatus 32.
FIGS. 4A and 4B schematically show how lateral error is accommodated when
interference is experienced by apparatus 32, and FIGS. 5A and 5B
schematically show how apparatus 32 mechanically operates when there is a
moment-causing axial misalignment between mating parts.
In FIG. 4A, grippers 78A and 78B attached to one end of robot arm 10 (FIG.
1) mounted relative motion sensing apparatus 32 attempts to place pin 84
in opening 86 of receiving member 88 as pin 84 is moved in axial direction
90, but is unable to initially do so because of the interference between
pin 84 and champfered surface 92 at the entrance to opening 86 of
receiving member 88 due to lateral misalignment of pin 84 with respect to
said opening 86. As pin 84 continues to be moved in axial direction 90,
such movement and the reaction from champfered surface 92 initiate lateral
movement of said pin 84, front plate 50 and support housing 62, on which
light emitting diode 60 and light focusing optical lens 62 are mounted, in
direction 94. In FIG. 4B, pin 84 has made sufficient lateral movement to
enable said pin 84 to fully enter the main portion of opening 86 in
receiving member 88. As a direct consequence of this pin 84 lateral
movement, spring-like compliant pads 52A, 52B, etc., laterally distort to
enable such movement, thereby causing light from diode 60 passing through
optical lens 62 and falling in the shape of a spot on photosensitive
suface 72 of photodiode 38 to move to another position on said
photosensitive surface 72. The effect of such light spot movement on the
photosensitive surface of photodiode 38 will be explained below in detial.
For the present, however, it is this light spot movement on said light or
photosensitive surface that causes photodiode 38 to generate an electrical
relative movement or position signal.
In FIG. 5A, grippers 78A and 78B attached to one end of robot arm 10 (FIG.
1) mounted relative movement sensing apparatus 32 now attempts to place
said pin 84 in opening 86 of receiving member 88 as pin 84 is being moved
in a direction that is at an acute angle to the longitudinal axis of
opening 86. While pin 84 is able to partially enter opening 86, said pin
is initially unable to fully enter opening 86 until the longitudinal axis
of pin 84 is aligned (parallel and/or coincident) with the longitudinal
axis of opening 86, because of the initial angular misalignment. As pin 84
continues to be moved in the same direction, said pin 84, front plate 50
and support housing 64, on which light emitting diode 60 and light
focusing optical lens 62 are mounted, experience rotational movement. In
FIG. 5B, pin 84 has made sufficient rotational movement about axis 96 to
enable said pin 84 to fully enter opening 86 in receiving member 88. As in
the previously described example, compliant pads 52A, 52B, etc., laterally
distort to enable such rotational movement again causing causing the spot
of light from light emitting diode 60 falling on photosensitive surface 72
of photodiode 38 to move to another position on said photosensitive
surface, the effect of such movement, as mentioned above, is to be
described below in detail.
The operation of conventional two-terminal single axis lateral effect
photodiode 97, is similar in operation to each axis of dual axis lateral
effect photodiode 38 in motion sensing apparatus 32 of the present
invention. The operation of two-terminal photodiode 97 will now be
described in detail. A schematic diagram of said two-terminal photodiode
97 is shown in drawing FIG. 6A. With reference to said FIG. 6A, the
current I.sub.s at position S, which is the position on photo-sensitive
surface 98 of photodiode 97 where a spot of focused light from a light
source falls on said surface, is given by the equation:
I.sub.s =I.sub.O (I-S/L)
where:
I.sub.0 is photoinduced current
I line current
S position S
L width of detector
For a dual axis photodiode such as diode 38 in the motion sensing apparatus
of FIG. 2, whose four external contacts are A, B, C and D, as shown in
drawing FIG. 6B, the electrical signal representing the X and Y position
of a light spot such as light spot 100 in said drawing FIG. 6B, may be
expressed as:
X position=A-C/A+C
Y position=B-D/B+D
As mentioned above, motion sensing apparatus 32 can be employed in at least
two different modes of operation. In one mode, changes in the relative
position between the robot hand and the robot arm body are monitored for
the purpose of interrupting or terminating robot arm movement due to robot
arm interference. Another mode of operation, changes in the relative
position of the robot hand (gripper 30) and the robot arm body are
monitored for the purpose of sensing inertial forces or for applying a
force to a body of a predetermined magnitude. FIG. 7 shows an information
flow block diagram of the motion sensing apparatus of the present
invention operating in the robot arm motion interrupting mode. With
reference to FIGS. 4A, 4B and 7, if, for example, front plate 50 of motion
sensing apparatus 32 should be laterally moved or translated in the X
and/or Y direction (102) against the tailored or chosen force of compliant
pads 52A, 52B, etc., the spot of light from high-intensity infrared light
emitting diode 60 through optical lens 62 falling on photosensitive
surface 72 of photodiode 38 will move from its initial position on said
surface 72 to a position linearly related to the relative movement between
front plate 50 supporting pneumatically actuated gripper assembly 30, and
wrist joint 28 mounted back plate 40 on which is mounted photodiode 38
(106). The relative movement produces an electrical signal (108)
representative of such X and/or Y movement. This signal is compared with
predetermined X and Y electrical signal levels (110) and then signal
presence in excess of a minimum time duration (112) is determined to
filter out false or unwanted mechanical vibrations. If the X or Y signals
are less than the predetermined magnitude or are shorter than the
predetermined time, the motion sensing apparatus will continue to monitor
relative robot hand (gripper) to robot arm body relative movement (114)
without interrupting robot arm movement. However, if the X or Y
translation signals are more than the predetermined magnitude and persist
for more than a predetermined time, compliant motion sensing apparatus 32
will cause robot arm motion to be interrupted (116).
FIG. 8 shows the information flow block diagram of motion sensing apparatus
32 of the present invention operating in the robot arm force providing
mode. With reference to FIGS. 4A, 4B and 8, if, for example, pin 84 should
be brought into contact with a portion of fixedly mounted receiving member
88 by the lateral movement of robot arm assembly 10 (FIG. 1), pin 84
together with front plate 50 of motion sensing apparatus 32 will be
laterally displaced or translated in an X and/or Y direction (118) against
the tailored or chosen force of compliant pads 52A, 52B, etc. The lateral
translation of pin 84 together with front plate 50 of motion sensing
apparatus 32 in an X and/or Y direction cause compliant pads 52A, 52B,
etc., to laterally deflect a corresponding distance "d" (120). The spring
constants K (122) of said compliant pads combine as a product function
(124) as said compliant pads are laterally deflected. As front plate 50
moves laterally, the spot of light from high-intensity infrared light
emitting diode 60 through optical lens 62 falling on photosensitive
surface 72 of lateral effect photodiode 38 will move from its initial
position on said surface 72 to a position linearly related to the relative
movement between front plate 50 and back plate 40 on which said diode 38
is mounted (126). This relative movement produces an electrical signal
(128) representative of such X and/or Y movement. The signal is compared
with desired X and/or Y electrical signal levels (130) whose magnitude(s)
corresponds to a desired predetermined force. Forces that are generated by
the robot arm result from robot arm deflection of compliant pads 52A, 52B,
etc., having a known spring constant, a particular distance "d". The
deflection of these compliant pads continues (132) until the desired
predetermined force is established. Once the force is established, robot
arm motion is terminated (134) and the force is maintained.
In addition to the position determining or relative movement sensing and
force generating modes described above, motion sensing appartaus 32 can
also be employed to determine the null or neutral position of robot hand
or gripper 30. By monitoring the current of lateral effect photodiode 32
it is possible to precisely determine said null position which can greatly
reduce robot arm programming time.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the foregoing
description of my invention that various improvements and modifications
can be made in it without departing from its true scope. The embodiments
described herein are merely illustrative and should not be viewed as the
only embodiments that might encompass my invention.
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