Anyone who has ever worked on a car’s engine or tried to fix a sink
knows the frustration of trying to perform precision work in a
hard-to-reach place. Imagine how that sense of frustration might
magnify when, instead of trying to wrap the head of a wrench around a
leaky nut under the kitchen counter, the scenario involves conducting
repairs on the International Space Station while floating nearly 200
miles above Earth. To ease this frustration, NASA funded work on
autonomous robotic devices that would be able to retrieve tools and
even crew outside of the station.
Partnership
Barrett Technology Inc., of Cambridge, Massachusetts, completed three Phase II Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR)
contracts with Johnson Space Center. In 1989, the company worked with
NASA on a Phase II to create a robotic arm, and in 1991, was again
awarded a Phase II to create a hand. Nearly a decade later, the company
was awarded a third Phase II for further miniaturization of the
components that comprise the robotic devices.
Product Outcome
Barrett has developed and commercialized three core
technologies that trace their roots directly back to the SBIR work with
NASA. The first is a robotic arm, the whole-arm manipulation (WAM)
system; the second is a hand that functions atop the arm, the
BH8-Series; and the third is a motor driver that the company refers to
as “the puck,” as it is similar in shape to a hockey puck, but
one-tenth the size.
The BarrettHand is a multifingered programmable grasper with the dexterity to secure target objects of different sizes, shapes, and orientations.
The SBIR work with NASA led to the development of the first
commercially available cable-driven robot, a distinction that earned
Barrett a place in the “Guinness World Records” book as the world’s
most advanced robotic arm. Designed for applications that require
superior adaptability, programmability, and dexterity, the WAM can
reach around large objects and grasp them with its arm links like huge
fingers, while conventional robotic arms are restricted to hand
end-effectors, and thus restricted to grasping smaller objects. The WAM
has other advantages over traditional robotic arms, in that it uses
gear-free cables to manipulate its joints, allowing it to feel and
control subtle forces.
The arm consists of a shoulder that
operates on a gearless differential mechanism, an upper arm, and a
gear-free elbow, forearm, and wrist. This arrangement of joints
coincides with the human shoulder and elbow, but with much greater
range of motion. Like a person’s arm, but unlike any industrial robotic
arm, the WAM Arm is backdriveable, meaning that any contact force along
the arm or its hand is immediately felt at the motors, supporting
graceful control of interactions with walls, objects, and even people.
With a human-scale 3-foot reach, it is so quick that it can grab a
major-league fastball, yet so sensitive that it responds to the
gentlest touch. The WAM Arm is available in two main configurations,
four-degrees-of-freedom and seven-degrees-of-freedom, both with
human-like kinematics. Internally protected channels allow the user to
pass electric lines and fiber optics required for custom end-effectors
and sensors.
These characteristics make it ideal for myriad applications, including
in space, where use of robots is often safer than people, in
manufacturing, and in medicine.
Recently, an adaptation of the WAM has been cleared by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration for use in a minimally invasive knee surgery
procedure, where its precision control makes it ideal for inserting a
very small implant. Barrett Technology licensed the arm to MAKO
Surgical Corporation, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, for use in the
company’s “keyhole” orthopedic surgery procedures.
The company uses small titanium knee implants instead of the more
common and more traumatic total-knee replacement, thus limiting surgery
to only the diseased part of the bone. These surgeries, however,
require an array of complex implant shapes to cover the variety of
disease patterns and bone geometries. To insert these devices, surgeons
generally cut small pockets into the diseased bone with a high-speed,
hand-held cutting device. While lacking in robotic precision, this
technique provides the surgeon with the tactile sensation of the
cutting, which in turn provides a wealth of intuitive information about
the diseased bone that is not available from preoperative X-rays.
The BarrettHand offers unmatched versatility, programmability, and ease of integration with commercial robotic arms, including the Barrett WAM Arm.
The WAM-based technologies combine the best of a surgeon’s intuition
and a robot’s precision through active haptics (touch sensing). The WAM
Arm improves the precision of the implant pockets while still allowing
the surgeon to feel bone condition. Matching pocket and implant
geometries minimizes trauma, ensures secure implant retention, and
optimizes resulting joint functionality.
Like the WAM
Arm, the BH8-262 BarrettHand offers many benefits in dexterity. A
multifingered programmable grasper, the BarrettHand can pick up objects
of different sizes, shapes, and orientations. According to the company,
integrating this device immediately multiplies the value of any arm
requiring flexible automation. Even with its low weight (1.18kg) and
compact form, it is totally self-contained. Plus, communicating by
industry-standard serial communications, integration with any robotic
arm is fast and simple.
The BarrettHand BH8-Series neatly houses a CPU, software,
communications electronics, servo-controllers, and four brushless
motors. Of its three multijointed fingers, two have an extra degree of
freedom with 180 degrees of synchronous lateral mobility supporting a
large variety of grasp types.
Barrett’s Ultra-Miniature Puck Brushless Servo Electronics Module, or
“Puck,” is the world’s smallest and most power-efficient,
high-performance servomotor controller. It is based on the work done
with NASA, as well as grants from the U.S. Department of Energy and the
National Science Foundation (NSF). Barrett has been shipping the Pucks
in all of its robotic WAM Arms for the past 3 years, because the device
offers several distinct advantages: the absence of a controller cabinet
improves reliability and portability; the incredibly low power
consumption (an order of magnitude less than any other arm in its
class) increases safety and portability, while also making the device
“greener;” and the ultra-high brushless-servo performance enables
applications such as force-field-enabled medical surgery.
While the Puck is not currently available outside the WAM Arm today,
Barrett has applied for NSF funding to develop features to make this
module universally adaptable within 3 years to a wide range of
brushless-servomotor applications.
WAM™, BarrettHand™, and Puck™ are trademarks of Barrett Technology Inc.
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