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Prehensile Pushing: In-hand Manipulation with Push-Primitives

Abstract

This paper explores the manipulation of a grasped object by pushing it against its environment. Relying on precise arm motions and detailed models of frictional contact, prehensile pushing enables dexterous manipulation with simple manipulators, such as those currently available in industrial settings, and those likely affordable by service and field robots. This paper is concerned with the mechanics of the forceful interaction between a gripper, a grasped object, and its environment. In particular, we describe the quasi-dynamic motion of an object held by a set of point, line, or planar rigid frictional contacts and forced by an external pusher (the environment). Our model predicts the force required by the external pusher to “break” the equilibrium of the grasp and estimates the instantaneous motion of the object in the grasp. It also captures interesting behaviors such as the constraining effect of line or planar contacts and the guiding effect of the pusher’s motion on the objects’s motion. We evaluate the algorithm with three primitive prehensile pushing actions—straight sliding, pivoting, and rolling—with the potential to combine into a broader in-hand manipulation capability.National Science Foundation (U.S.). National Robotics Initiative (Award NSF-IIS-1427050)Karl Chang Innovation Fund Awar

Similar works

This paper was published in DSpace@MIT.

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