Arrow Research search

Author name cluster

Michael Gerke 0001

Possible papers associated with this exact author name in Arrow. This page groups case-insensitive exact name matches and is not a full identity disambiguation profile.

2 papers
1 author row

Possible papers

2

IROS Conference 1995 Conference Paper

Fuzzy collision avoidance for industrial robots

  • Michael Gerke 0001
  • Helmut Hoyer

An advanced concept to solve the collision avoidance problem in multi-robot workcells is presented which holds realtime conditions for industrial robot controllers. The approach is based on a fuzzy set description of critical configurations between robots in a common workspace. The authors' strategy assumes a careful offline path planning to unburden the algorithm from online path planning but to handle extraordinary events, which can not be treated offline. Though the authors' collision avoidance strategy is local, in general it switches towards the preplanned trajectory with decreasing degree of conflict and finally reaches planned goal positions. To handle the collision avoidance problem in realtime, the complex kinematic chain of any industrial robot with six degrees of freedom is replaced by a drastically reduced actual robot (RAR). Fuzzification of the actual RAR position in a workspace provides a fuzzy membership vector to sectors, which subdivide the robots' cylindrical workspace. A practical fuzzy-rulebase is given to evaluate the degree of conflict between the actual fuzzy membership vectors of two RARs and to propose secure fuzzy-membership vectors. Defuzzification gives crisp locations of a collision-free trajectory which are restricted by the preplanned trajectory locations if the conflict is small. The efficiency of this strategy is illustrated by an example with two PUMA 562 robots in decoupled motion.

ICRA Conference 1994 Conference Paper

Online Collision Avoidance for Industrial Robots with Six Degrees of Freedom

  • Helmut Hoyer
  • Michael Gerke 0001
  • Ulrich Borgolte

An online collision avoidance strategy is presented for two industrial robots sharing a common workspace. The algorithm can be computed very fast to provide secure trajectories within the cycle time of industrial robot controllers. Substitution of the complex kinematics of any industrial robot with six degrees of freedom by the more convenient kinematics of the reduced actual robot (RAR) and computation of a virtual hinderance robot (VHR), which describes the most dangerous joint angle position of the RAR with regard to another RAR in the workcell leads to a degree of danger in each component of the RAR's cylindrical frame and results in the evaluation of a secure trajectory. An online decision is made between each component of the preplanned trajectory and the corresponding component of the secure trajectory. The collision-free trajectory is transformed back to the 6D-workspace of the industrial robot. The efficiency of the authors' strategy is illustrated in an example with two PUMA 562 robots. >