ArXiv TLDR

Contact-Aware Planning and Control of Continuum Robots in Highly Constrained Environments

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2604.15638

Aedan Mangan, Kehan Long, Ki Myung Brian Lee, Miheer Potdar, Nikolay Atanasov + 1 more

cs.ROeess.SYmath.OC

TLDR

A contact-aware planning and control system for continuum robots safely navigates highly constrained environments by evaluating and managing contact quality.

Key contributions

  • Developed a contact-aware planning approach that evaluates and penalizes hazardous interactions, permitting benign contact.
  • Generates kinematically feasible trajectories and contact-aware Jacobians for closed-loop control.
  • Validated on anatomical models, achieving 100% success in avoiding dangerous tip contact in hardware trials.
  • Ablation studies showed penalizing end-of-continuum-segment contact improved manipulability and prevented failures.

Why it matters

Continuum robots often operate in delicate, confined spaces where contact is unavoidable. This paper offers a robust method for safe and reliable navigation by intelligently managing contact quality. It significantly advances the practical application of these robots in areas like medical procedures.

Original Abstract

Continuum robots are well suited for navigating confined and fragile environments, such as vascular or endoluminal anatomy, where contact with surrounding structures is often unavoidable. While controlled contact can assist motion, unfavorable contact can degrade controllability, induce kinematic singularities, or introduce safety risks. We present a contact-aware planning approach that evaluates contact quality, penalizing hazardous interactions, while permitting benign contact. The planner produces kinematically feasible trajectories and contact-aware Jacobians which can be used for closed-loop control in hardware experiments. We validate the approach by testing the integrated system (planning, control, and mechanical design) on anatomical models from patient scans. The planner generates effective plans for three common anatomical environments, and, in all hardware trials, the continuum robot was able to reach the target while avoiding dangerous tip contact (100% success). Mean tracking errors were 1.9 +/- 0.5 mm, 1.2 +/- 0.1 mm, and 1.7 +/- 0.2 mm across the three different environments. Ablation studies showed that penalizing end-of-continuum-segment (ECS) contact improved manipulability and prevented hardware failures. Overall, this work enables reliable, contact-aware navigation in highly constrained environments.

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