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Motion Control of A Four-Wheel-Drive Omnidirectional Wheelchair With High Step Climbing Capability

This document discusses a new type of omnidirectional wheelchair with four-wheel drive (4WD) capability and enhanced step climbing ability. It begins by introducing the need for more capable electric mobility systems for the elderly. It then reviews existing omnidirectional wheelchair systems and their limitations. A 4WD mechanism is proposed that connects each pair of wheels on the same side via a transmission to provide traction. The document proposes applying "powered-caster control" to the 4WD system to enable omnidirectional motion. Details are provided on how powered-casters work and how their velocities can be coordinated to control an omnidirectional robot. The goal is to develop a single wheelchair design with high mobility for both indoor and outdoor use.

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Ayush Pant
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
35 views18 pages

Motion Control of A Four-Wheel-Drive Omnidirectional Wheelchair With High Step Climbing Capability

This document discusses a new type of omnidirectional wheelchair with four-wheel drive (4WD) capability and enhanced step climbing ability. It begins by introducing the need for more capable electric mobility systems for the elderly. It then reviews existing omnidirectional wheelchair systems and their limitations. A 4WD mechanism is proposed that connects each pair of wheels on the same side via a transmission to provide traction. The document proposes applying "powered-caster control" to the 4WD system to enable omnidirectional motion. Details are provided on how powered-casters work and how their velocities can be coordinated to control an omnidirectional robot. The goal is to develop a single wheelchair design with high mobility for both indoor and outdoor use.

Uploaded by

Ayush Pant
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Motion Control of a Four-wheel-drive

Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step Climbing Capability

57

X4
Motion Control of a Four-wheel-drive
Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step
Climbing Capability
Masayoshi Wada

Dept. of Mechanical Systems Engineering


Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology
Japan
1. Introduction
In recent years, aging problem has been arising to be among the most serious social issues
world wide, especially in some European and Asian countries, involving Japan. It is
reported in Japan that the population of over 65 years old would reach 30,000,000 in 2012
and grow over 30% of total population in 2025[1].
Electric wheelchairs, personal mobiles, scooters are currently commercially available not
only for handicapped persons but also for elderly. However, such a rapid grow of aging
populations suggest that requirements for electric mobile systems will soon increase
dramatically for supporting mobility and activity of elderly people and reducing labor of
care-givers.
However, those mobile systems do not have enough functionalities and capabilities for
moving around existing environments including step, rough terrain, slopes, gaps, floor
irregularities as well as insufficient traction powers and maneuverability in crowded areas.
Promotion of barrier-free environments will be required for a large number of users of
wheelchairs and other electric mobile systems however, re-constructing of the existing
facilities could not be a feasible solution because of the limitations in economy and time.
For overcoming the problem, to improve the mobility of the electric mobile systems to adapt
to existing environments could be one solution. For this objective, we propose a new type of
wheelchair, four-wheel-drive (4WD) omnidirectional system, with enhanced step climb
capability together with high maneuverability. In this chapter, omnidirectional control of a
wheelchair with 4WD mechanism would be mainly discussed.
The mobile systems realizing holonomic and omnidirectional motion is one of the important
research area in mobile robots. It provide flexibility and high maneuverability to motion
planners and human drivers. The holonomic and omnidirectional mobile capability is very
convenient for human drivers since they do not have to understand drive mechanisms and
its configuration at all. A human only commands the direction and velocity of motion
he/her wants to perform since a holonomic and omnidirectional mechanism can start to
move in any direction with any configuration of the mechanism such as directions of wheels.

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This characteristics is vary suitable for wheelchairs and personal mobiles which is used for
daily life for maneuvering crowded area at home.
In the following sections, a new type of omnidirectional system is proposed which realizes
the holonomic and omnidirectional capability together with high mobility on irregular
terrains or steps.

2. Conventional Omnidirectional Systems For Wheelchairs


A standard wheelchair cannot move sideways. It needs a complex series of movements
resembling parallel automobile parking when a wheelchair user wants to move sideways. A
lot of omnidirectional drive systems were developed and applied to electric wheelchairs to
enhance standard wheelchair maneuverability by enabling them to move sideways without
changing the chair orientation. In Fig. 1, an omnidirectional wheelchair with Mechanum
wheels [2] uses barrel-shaped rollers on the large wheel's rim inclining the direction of
passive rolling 45 degrees from the main wheel shaft and enabling the wheel to slide in the
direction of rolling. The standard four-Mechanum-wheel configuration assumes a car-like
layout. The inclination of rollers on the Mechanum wheel causes the contact point to vary
relative to the main wheel, resulting in energy loss due to conflictions in motion among the
four wheels. Because four-point contact is essential, a suspension mechanism is definitely
needed to ensure 3-degrees-of-freedom (3DOF) movement. Fig.2 shows an omnidirectinal
wheelchair with ball wheel mechanisms developed at MIT [3]. Each ball wheel is driven by
an individual motor which provides active traction force in a specific direction while
perpendicular to the active direction. With this drive system, the point of contact of a wheel
is stable relative to the wheelchair body that enables accurate motion control and smooth
movements with no vibration.

Fig. 1. Omnidirectional wheelchair with Mechanum wheels [2]

Fig. 2. Ball wheel omnidirectional wheelchair [3]

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Motion Control of a Four-wheel-drive


Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step Climbing Capability

59

The other omnidirectional mechanism is VUTON crawler[4] which consists of many


cylindrical free rollers. Since VUTON mechanism allows the multiple rollers to touch the
ground simultaneously, heavy load can be applied on the platform.
All of the above omnidirectional systems need one motor to drive one wheel mechanism
therefore four motors are needed to drive a four-wheeled wheelchair, while a wheelchair
has three degrees of freedoms (DOF) on the floor. Thus, it involves 1 DOF redundancy in
actuation which causes conflictions in motion among the four wheels.

3. Four-Wheel-Drive (4WD) Mechanism


To give a high mobile capability to a wheelchair, we introduce a four-wheel-drive (4WD)
mechanism to our omnidirectional mobile system. At first, the original 4WD design is
simply mentioned.
The 4WD drive system was invented in 1989 [5] for enhancing the traction and step climbing
capability of the differential drive systems which schematic is illustrated in Fig.3. This 4WD
mechanism has recently applied to a product design by a Japanese company [6]. The
wheelchair equips four wheels, two omni-wheels in front and two normal tires in rear. A
normal wheel and an omni-wheel, mounted on the same side of the chair, are
interconnected by a chain or a belt transmission to rotate in unison with a drive motor. A
common motor is installed to drive normal and omni wheel pair via synchro-drive
transmission on each side of the mechanism. Then two motors provide deferent velocity on
each side witch presents differential drive motion of 4WD mechanism. Thus all four wheels
on 4WD can provide traction forces. Since the center of rotation shifts backward, when it
turns about a steady point on the floor, it requires large space when the wheelchair is
controlled in the standard differential drive manner. The offset distance between drive
wheels and a center of a chair makes the maneuverability of the wheelchair worse.

Fig. 3. Original 4WD synchronized transmission

4. Powered-caster Omnidirectional Control


We apply powered-caster control to 4WD mechanism to give an omnidirectional mobile
capability to a wheelchair with 4WD. In this section, The powered-caster omnidirectional
control for the original single type configuration[7] is breafly mentioned followed by the
control of 4WD mechanism in the next section.

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4.1 Powered-caster Mechanism


Fig.4 shows a top view of a powered-caster. The original design of the powered-caster is a
single wheel type in which normal wheel is off-centered from steering shaft. The wheel shaft
and the steering shaft of the powered-caster is driven by independent motors. When only
the wheel shaft is rotated by the motor, the caster moves in forward direction which is
denoted as x w in Fig.4. When only the steering shaft is rotated by an another motor, the
mechanism rotates about the point of contact which is also shown in the figure. By this
motion of rotation, the steering shaft moves in lateral in y w at the instant which is tangential
of the circle which center is at the point of contact with the radius is s, the caster-offset.
These velocity vectors are independently controlled and directing right angle for each other.
To generate a velocity V in the direction at the center of the steering shaft, the wheel and
the steering shaft rotations, w and s, are derived by the following kinematics.

1
w r cos
1
s sin
s

sin x
w
r

1
y

cos w
s

(1)

where s and r are the caster offset and the wheel radius respectively. Thus shaft rotations are
determined by a function of , the relative angle between the desired direction and the
wheel mechanism.

Fig. 4. Velocity control of a powered-caster


4.2 Omnidirectional Mobile Robot with Powered-casters
Figure 5 shows a schematic overview of an omnidirectional mobile robot with two poweredcasters. The robot with a pair of powered-casters is controlled by four electric motors which
involves one redundant DOF in actuation. For this class of omnidirectional robots, the
powered-caster provides an active traction force in an arbitrary direction for propelling the
robot. To coordinate the multiple powered-casters, motors on a powered-caster are
controlled based on the velocity based robot model.

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Motion Control of a Four-wheel-drive


Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step Climbing Capability

61

The inverse kinematics of two-wheeled mobile robot is represented as (2) which represents a
relationship between the commanded robot velocity in 3DOF[ x v , y v , v ] and a A wheel

velocity [ x a , y a ] and a B wheel velocity[ x b , y b ].

x a 1
y 0
a
x b 1

y b 0

0 W2 cos v
x v
1 W2 sin v
y v
0 W2 cos v
v
1 W2 sin v

(2)

Fig. 5. A two-wheeled omnidirectional robot

5. Omnidirectional Control of 4WD Mobile system


In our project, it is a goal to develop an omnidirectional wheelchair with high mobility and
maneuverability in a single design which can be used in multiple environments including
outdoor and indoor. To enable a wheelchair to move in any direction instantaneously,
omnidirectional control method, called "powered-caster control" which was introduced in
previous section, is extended and applied to the 4WD mechanism [7]. Fig.6 shows a
schematic of the 4WD omnidirectional wheelchair. The wheelchair has two omniwheels in
front and standard pneumatic tires in rear which form 4WD configuration. A pair of an
omniwheel and a pneumatic tire mounted on the same side of the wheelchair are connected
by belt transmission for rotating unison and driven by a common motor which
configuration is completely identical to the original 4WD system shown in Fig.3.
In our design, an additional third motor is mounted on the conventional 4WD platform for
rotating a chair about the vertical axis which is also illustrated in Fig.6. Those three motors
including two wheel motors and the chair rotation motor enable the wheelchair to realize
independent 3DOF omnidirectional motion by a coordinated motion control [8],[9].

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To achieve coordinated control for omnidirectional motion of a chair, the powered-caster


omnidirectional control for a twin-caster configuration has been applied to the 4WD system.
Fig.7 illustrates a schematic top view of a 4WD mechanism. In Fig.7, it is found that rear two
drive wheels and center axis form a twin-caster configuration, i.e. parallel two wheels are
located on the off-centered position which midpoint is distant from vertical steering axis,
which is emphasized by thick lines in the Fig.7 and a vehicle with a twin caster drive
mechanism is shown in Fig.8. The powered-caster omnidirectional control enables the caster
mechanism to emulate the caster motion by actuating wheel and steering axes.

Fig. 6. A 4WD omnidirectional wheelchair

Fig. 7. Omnidirectional vehicle with 4WD mechanism

Fig. 8. Omnidirectional vehicle with a twin-caster

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Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step Climbing Capability

63

The powered-casterbased coordinate control of three motors needs a kinematic model of


the 4WD[10]. The kinematic model represents the relationships between the motion of the
4WD and the three motor angular velocities of the drive wheels and the chair rotation axis.
First, we consider the fundamental motions of a twin-caster drive (TCD). Figure 9a shows
the translational motion of the vehicle in which two wheels rotate in same angular velocity
to travel in same direction. In this case, TCD travels also straight forward, therefore TCD
velocity and its rotation are represented as follows.

1
vR v L v
2
1
v v R v L 0
W
x v

(3)

Figure 9b shows another motion in which two wheels are rotated at same angular velocities
but in opposite directions resulting in spin of TCD about the midpoint of two wheels. This
motion provides only rotation but no translation velocity which is represented as,

1
v R vL 0
2
1
2v
v v R v L
W
W
x v

(4)

(a): Motion in X-direction


(b): Motion in Y-direction
Fig. 9. Omnidirectional control for twin-caster drive (TCD)
Now we focus on the motion of the steering center whose location is identical to the rotation
center of a chair. When TCD rotates about the midpoint of two wheels, the center of the
steering presents a circular motion whose center is at the midpoint and the radius equals the
caster offset, s. At each moment, velocity at the center is directing tangential direction of the
circle which directs the lateral direction of TCD at all times. The lateral velocity denoted by
y v in Fig. 9b is represented by,

y v sv

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s
v R v L 2sv
W
W

(5)

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The translation velocities x v and y v are directed at right angles to each other. Note here, the
rotation of TCD is not independently controlled since the rotation v is determined by

creating the lateral velocity y v to satisfy Eq (5). From Eqs. (3)-(5), the relationships between
the vehicle translation velocity and wheel velocities are derived as,

x v 1 / 2
y
v s / W

1 / 2 v R

s / W v L

(6)

Thus, translation velocities along the X- and Y-directions are completely determined and
independently controlled by wheel velocities. To generate the required velocity vector that
directs in an arbitrary direction with arbitrary magnitude, the reference vector is projected
in X- and Y-directions of vehicle coordinate system (Fig.10). The velocity component in each
direction, x v or y v , can be independently achieved by using kinematics of TCD in Eq. (6).

Fig. 10. Projection of a command velocity into vehicle coordinate system depending on the
TCD orientation.
When the reference velocity is steady to the ground, the velocity components in X- and Ydirections vary depending on the TCD orientation relative to the ground. Therefore, wheel
velocities also vary which results in straight motion of the TCD center (see Fig. 11). TCD
shows spontaneous flipping behavior during the motion, which is often found in passive
casters installed on legs of chairs and tables, etc. It is said the powered-caster control
emulates caster motion by actively actuating the wheel axis.
Fig.11 shows a one of the simulation results in which an omnidirectional control of the twincaster mechanism are tested. In the simulation, twin-caster mechanism is controlled to track
a straight line with a center of a mechanism locating on the line at all times. During the
motion, the orientation of the mechanism is rapidly flipped over and orient to the direction
of motion. This flip motion is often seen on passive casters which installed on the legs of
office chairs and tables. Thus the powered-caster control achieves the emulation of caster
motions by coordinated control of multiple actuators.

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Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step Climbing Capability

65

Fig. 11. Omnidirectional control for twin-caster mechanism


Translation in arbitrary direction is achieved by TCD as presented above. However,
orientation of TCD can not be controlled independently by the wheel rotations. To control
3DOF motion of a chair, the chair rotation axis must be also coordinated. The velocity
command is given based on the chair orientation since a joystick is fixed on the chair. Then
the command velocity is translated into TCD coordinate by the relative orientation of the
chair to the vehicle, v. as

x c x v cos v y v sin v
y c x v sin v y v cos v
c v s

(7)

From eqs. (6) and (7), an overall kinematic model of the omnidirectional 4WD wheelchair is
represented as follows.

where,

x c J 11

y c J 21
r / W
c

J 12
r /W

r cos v
2
r cos v
J 12
2
r sin v
J 21
2
r sin v
J 22
2
J 11

J 22

0 R

0 L
1 S

rs sin v
W
rs sin v

W
rs cos v

W
rs cos v

(8)

(9)

Where r,W and s are the wheel radius, tread and caster-offset, respectively. A 3x3 matrix in
the right side of eq.(8), called as Jacobian, is a function of orientation of the 4WD unit with
relative to the chair base, v. All elements in the Jacobian can always be calculated and a
determinant of the Jacobian may not be zero for any v. Therefore there is no singular point
on the mechanism and an inverse Jacobian always exits. The three motors are controlled to
realize a 3DOF angular velocity commands x v , y v and v by independent speed controllers

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Climbing and Walking Robots

for omnidirectional movements. Thus, holonomic 3DOF motion can be realized by the
proposed mechanism. This class of omnidirectional mobility, so called holonomic
mobility, is very effective to realize the high maneuverability of wheelchairs by an easy and
simple operation.

6. Prototype Design
6.1 Mechanical Design
Wheelchair specifications for prototype design are shown in Table 1. The wheelbase and
tread of the 4WD mechanism are 400mm and 535mm respectively. Those dimensions are
determined to satisfy the limitation of the standard wheelchair specification for the
dimension, 600mm in width and 700mm in length as shown in the spec. The required step
height which can be surmounted by the wheelchair is approx. 100mm for accessing to a
train car from a station platform with no assistance. The maximum running speed for
continuous drive is 6km/h which is same as conventional standard wheelchairs in Japan.
Fig.12 illustrates a 3D drawing of a prototype designed by 3D CAD. Fig.13 shows an
overview of the prototype wheelchair.
Dimension

Weight
Speed
Surmountable step
Table 1. Wheelchair Specifications

Width
600mm
Length
700mm
Height
450mm
Total
180kg(human+wheelchair)
Wheelchair
100kg (including batteries)
6km/h (Max.)
100mm in height

Chair

Steering
motor

Left wheel
motor
Fig. 12. Prototype bottom view by 3D CAD

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3D joystick

Right wheel
motor

Motion Control of a Four-wheel-drive


Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step Climbing Capability

67

Fig. 13. 4WD omnidirectional wheelchair prototype


6.2 Control system
Figure 14 shows a control system of the wheelchair prototype. Most of equipments
including a controller, motors, motor drivers, a battery and sensors are installed on 4WD
mechanism side. Electric power is provided by a car battery and distributed to all
components on the chair after the inversion to AC 100V. A tablet PC controls three motors to
realize an omnidirectional and holonomic motions of a wheelchair based on reference
velocity commanded by a 3D joystick. A velocity command is sent to each motor driver via
a D/A interface while a encoder pulse is sent back to the PC via a pulse counter interface
which form a velocity feedback loop of the axis. An absolute encoder is installed only on the
chair rotation shaft which detects relative angle between the 4WD and the chair which needs
no initialization process at power on reset. Since a chair have to rotate continuously with no
mechanical limit, slip rings are also installed on the chair rotation axis. A USB hub on the
chair side enables extension of devices additional to an A/D converter for the 3D joystick.

Fig. 14. System configuration of the prototype wheelchair

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7. Experiments
7.1 Omnidirectional motion
To verify the omnidirectional mobility of the proposed system, lateral motion was presented
by the prototype wheelchair while keeping the chair orientation constant.
A small ball was attached to the chair to measure the location of the center of the steering
axis. A stereo camera system (Quick Mag IV from OKK Inc, Japan) detects the ball location
in 3D coordinates. The prototype was controlled by a remote PC via a LAN connection
through which the remote PC send the velocity command to the wheelchair controller. Thus,
a complete linear trajectory in lateral direction was commanded to the prototype. Figure 15
shows a chair motion detected by the stereo camera system. An actual and a reference path
are plotted in the figure which closely agree. Figure 16 shows tracking errors between the
actual and the reference. The error was suppressed to within 10mm (+5 to -5mm) despite the
flipping behavior of the 4WD occurred during the experiment motion.
The camera system also provided real-time video images with over-writing rectangle
window(s) and the path of the target(s) (in this experiment, a small ball). Figure 17(a)-(f)
shows a series of video images. The prototype wheelchair moved from the right side of the
picture frame to the left. The final picture, Fig. 17(f) shows a straight path which was created
by the wheelchair movement. During the motion, the flipping behavior of the 4WD is found
in Fig. 17(b), (c) and (d), which is also shown in a computer simulation in Fig. 11.
7.2 Variable center of rotation
The proposed system realizes holonomic and omnidirectional motion of a chair by the
coordinated control of three motors. The holonomic mobile capability makes it possible to
change the location of a center of rotation at any point to fit to customer requests. In a
normal setup, a chair rotates about its center when the operator commands a spin turn by
twisting the joystick. However, the location of the center is variable in the control program
to any point including the out-of-footprint area of the wheelchair. However, usual requests
may be to shift it to the back side to simulate a rear drive wheelchair, or to the front side to
simulate a front drive wheelchair. To present the flexibility of the proposed system, two
patterns of spin turn motion were performed. Figure 18(a) and (b) shows the final image of
each test run provided by the stereo camera system. In Fig. 18(a), the wheelchair rotated
about the front position which was located approx. 500 mm forward of the center of the
chair. In Fig. 18(b), the center was shifted also approx. 500 mm towards the rear. From these
results, the center of rotation can be customized to an individual.
W heelchair Trajectory (Lateralm otion)
1800

1600

P osition Y m m

1400

1200

1000

800

600

400
1300

1400

1500

1600
1700
P osition X m m

1800

1900

Fig. 15. Reference and actual trajectories of the 4WD wheelchair

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Motion Control of a Four-wheel-drive


Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step Climbing Capability

69

Tracking Error (Lateralm otion)

Error m m

10.0
7.5
5.0
2.5
0.0
-2.5
-5.0
-7.5
-10.0
0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

P ath length m m

Fig. 16. Tracking error on the experiment using 4WD wheelchair

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

Fig. 17. An example of omnidirectional motion 1: the lateral motion of the wheelchair
prototype; it moves in sideways from the right side to the left of the picture frames while
maintaining the chair orientation to be stable.

(a) Spin turn about the front position


Fig. 18 Variable center of rotation

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(b) Spin turn about the back position

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Climbing and Walking Robots

7.3 Task example


The holonomic and omnidirectional mobile systems are easy to maneuver because 3D
command in X- and Y- directions and rotation are directory commanded and an operator
does not have to consider the wheel motions and its configurations.
To demonstrate maneuverability, a task example was performed by the prototype. The task
of getting out of a room by pulling the door open is one of difficult tasks for a wheelchair
user. A task of pulling the door is relatively more difficult than pushing the door. This task
example includes sub tasks such as: 1) approaching to the door to grasp the door knob, 2)
moving backward to pull the door open, 3) going through the door and getting out of the
room, and 4) driving to another location.
Figure 19(a)-(j) show screen shots of the experiment. In this test, the prototype wheelchair
was operated using a 3D joystick by a human operator who was sitting on the chair. Since
the wheelchair has high maneuverability, the task was successfully achieved with no
collision with the door or a wall. The operator did not see the 4WD mechanism during the
task, however, the 4WD mechanism changed its orientation widely when the operator
moved sideways to avoid colliding with the door (Fig. 19(d)-(g)).
Figure 20 shows the 3D commands (X, Y and Rotation) to the wheelchair during the task of
Fig.19 which shows 3D simultaneous motion to complete the door opening task. Those are
found in sub tasks including, 1) approaching the door and 4-1) turning after exiting the
room. Individual lateral translations are often found in subtask 3) exiting the room.

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

(g)

(h)

(i)

(j)

Fig. 19. An example of tasks using a electric wheelchair: Getting out of a room with pulling a
door open.

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Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step Climbing Capability

71

Wheelchair task of getting out of a room with pulling a door open

Velocity commandsx,y and m/s, rad/s

2.5
2

Motion in Y-direction

Motion in X-direction

1.5
1
0.5
0
-0.5
-1

Rotation

-1.5
-2

1) Approaching to a door

2) Pulling a door 3) Going to exit 4-1) Turning

4-2) High
speed drive

-2.5
0

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Time s

Fig. 20. 3DMotion of wheelchair presenting a door opening task for exiting a room

8. Conclusion
Mechanism and omnidirectional control of a 4WD mechanism for wheelchairs are presented
in this chapter. The omnidirectional wheelchair system is proposed for improving
maneuverability of standard wheelchairs The 4WD mechanism has high mobility which
equips four wheels, two omni-wheels in the front and two normal tires in the rear, and all
wheels provide traction even with two motors to drive these wheels. To realize holonomic
and omnidirectional motion of a chair by utilizing the 4WD mechanism, the proposed
system includes the third motor to rotate the chair at the center of the 4WD mechanism
about the vertical axis.
For omnidirectional control of the 4WD mechanism, powered-caster control has been
applied. To achieve a coordinated control of three motors, kinematics of the 4WD
wheelchair was analyzed and a kinematic model was derived which represents the
relationships between 3DOF wheelchair motion and the rotations of three motors. In the
powered-caster control, two wheel motors are coordinated to translate the center of the chair
in an arbitrary direction while the chair orientation is controlled by the third motor
separately.
The omnidirectional motion was verified by a series of experiments using a wheelchair
prototype. First, omnidirectional mobility was tested in which the wheelchair made a lateral
motion without changing its orientation. Next, one of a applications of the holonomic
mobility was performed in which the center of rotation was varied by a control program to
customize per user request for simulating the wheelchair drive types, such as front drive,
rear drive, or center drive.
To present the high maneuverability of the proposed omnidirectional mobile system, a task
example was performed in which an operator maneuvered the wheelchair by 3D joystick to
exit a room with pulling the door open. The task was successfully achieved with no collision

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with the door or walls. During the task, it was found that the simultaneous 3DOF motions,
lateral translation are often commanded as well as the forward translation for pursuing the
task.
From these experiments, the omnidirectional and holonomic mobile capability are shown to
be very effective and useful for maneuvering in crowded areas and achieving complicated
tasks.

9. Acknowledgment
This project was supported by the Industrial Technology Research Grant Program in 2006
from the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization (NEDO),
Japan, research ID 05A06715a.

10. References
[1] Population Statistics Japan 2006, by the National Institute of Population and Social
Security Research, Japan.
[2] All-direction Power-driven Chair FJ-UEC-600, Fujian Fortune Jet Mechanical &
Electrical Technology Co., Ltd.
[3] M. Wada and H. H. Asada (1999) Design and Control of a Variable Footprint Mechanism
for Holonomic and Omnidirectional Vehicles and its Application to Wheelchairs,
IEEE Trans on Robotics and Automation, Vol.15, No. 6, pp. 978-989.
[4] S. Hirose and S. Amano (1993) The VUTON : High Payload High Efficiency Holonomic
Omni-Directional Vehicle, 6th Int. Symp. on Robotics Research.
[5] Jefferey Farnam (1989), Four-wheel Drive Wheel-chair with Compound Wheels, US
patent 4,823,900.
[6] Kanto Automobile Corp. Patrafour
http://www.kanto-aw.co.jp/jp/products/wheelchair/
[7] M. Wada and S. Mori (1996), Holonomic and Omnidirectional Vehicle with Conventional
Tires, Proceedings of the 1996 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and
Automation (ICRA96), pp. 3671-3676.
[8] M. Wada, A. Takagi and S. Mori (2000), Caster Drive Mechanisms for Holonomic and
Omnidirectional Mobile Platforms with no Over Constraint, Proceedings of the
2000 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA2000), pp.
1531 -1538.
[9] M. Wada (2007), Omnidirectional and Holonomic Mobile Platform with Four-WheelDrive Mechanism for Wheelchairs, JSME Journal of Robotics and Mechatronics,
Vol. 19, No. 3, pp. 264-271.
[10] M. Wada (2007), Holonomic and Omnidirectional Wheelchairs with synchronized 4WD
Mechanism, Proceedings of the 2007 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on
Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS2007), pp. 1196-1202.

www.intechopen.com

Climbing and Walking Robots


Edited by Behnam Miripour

ISBN 978-953-307-030-8
Hard cover, 508 pages
Publisher InTech

Published online 01, March, 2010

Published in print edition March, 2010


Nowadays robotics is one of the most dynamic fields of scientific researches. The shift of robotics researches
from manufacturing to services applications is clear. During the last decades interest in studying climbing and
walking robots has been increased. This increasing interest has been in many areas that most important ones
of them are: mechanics, electronics, medical engineering, cybernetics, controls, and computers. Todays
climbing and walking robots are a combination of manipulative, perceptive, communicative, and cognitive
abilities and they are capable of performing many tasks in industrial and non- industrial environments.
Surveillance, planetary exploration, emergence rescue operations, reconnaissance, petrochemical
applications, construction, entertainment, personal services, intervention in severe environments,
transportation, medical and etc are some applications from a very diverse application fields of climbing and
walking robots. By great progress in this area of robotics it is anticipated that next generation climbing and
walking robots will enhance lives and will change the way the human works, thinks and makes decisions. This
book presents the state of the art achievments, recent developments, applications and future challenges of
climbing and walking robots. These are presented in 24 chapters by authors throughtot the world The book
serves as a reference especially for the researchers who are interested in mobile robots. It also is useful for
industrial engineers and graduate students in advanced study.

How to reference

In order to correctly reference this scholarly work, feel free to copy and paste the following:
Masayoshi Wada (2010). Motion Control of a Four-wheel-drive Omnidirectional Wheelchair with High Step
Climbing Capability, Climbing and Walking Robots, Behnam Miripour (Ed.), ISBN: 978-953-307-030-8, InTech,
Available from: http://www.intechopen.com/books/climbing-and-walking-robots/motion-control-of-a-four-wheeldrive-omnidirectional-wheelchair-with-high-step-climbing-capability

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