According to the topological design theory and method of parallel mechanism (PM) based on position and orientation characteristic (POC) equations, this paper studied a 3-DOF translational PM that has three advantages, i.e., (i) it consists of three fixed actuated prismatic joints, (ii) the PM has analytic solutions to the direct and inverse kinematic problems, and (iii) the PM is of partial motion decoupling property. Firstly, the main topological characteristics, such as the POC, degree of freedom and coupling degree were calculated for kinematic modeling. Thanks to these properties, the direct and inverse kinematic problems can be readily solved. Further, the conditions of the singular configurations of the PM were analyzed which corresponds to its partial motion decoupling property. 0 J J J
According to the topological design theory and method of parallel mechanism (PM) based on position and orientation characteristic (POC) equations, this paper design a novel 3-translation (3T) PM that has three advantages, i.e., (1) it consists on three actuated prismatic joints, (2) the PM has analytical direct position solutions, and (3) the PM is of partial motion decoupling property. Firstly, the main topological characteristics such as the POC, degree of freedom and coupling degree are calculated for kinematics modelling. Due to the special constraint feature of the 3-translation, the analytical direct position solutions of the PM can be directly obtained without needing to use one-dimensional search method. Further, the conditions of the singular configuration of the PM, as well as the singularity location inside the workspace are analyzed according to the inverse kinematics.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.