Master manipulator designed for highly articulated robotic instruments in single access surgery

The performance of a master-slave robotic system depends significantly on the ergonomics and the capability of its master device to correctly interface the user with the slave robot. Master manipulators generating commands in task space represent a commonly adopted solution for controlling a range of slave robots while retaining an ergonomic design. However, these devices present several drawbacks, such as requiring the use of clutching mechanics to compensate for the mismatch between slave and master workspaces, and the lack of capability to intuitively transmit important information such as specific joint limits to the user. In this paper, a novel joint-space master manipulator is presented. This manipulator emulates the kinematic structure of highly flexible surgical instruments which it is designed to control. This system uses 6 active degrees of freedom to compensate for its own weight, as well as to provide force feedback corresponding to the slave robot's joint limits. A force/torque sensor integrated at the end effector is used to relay user-generated forces and torques directly to specific joints. This is performed to counteract the friction stemming from structural constraints imposed by the kinematic design of the instruments. Finally, a usability study is carried out to test the validity of the system, proving that the instruments can be intuitively controlled even at the extremities of the workspace.

[1]  Roland Werthschützky,et al.  Pseudo-Haptic Feedback in Teleoperation , 2016, IEEE Transactions on Haptics.

[2]  Jindong Liu,et al.  A Single-Port Robotic System for Transanal Microsurgery—Design and Validation , 2017, IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters.

[3]  Peter I. Corke Robotics, Vision and Control - Fundamental Algorithms In MATLAB® Second, Completely Revised, Extended And Updated Edition, Second Edition , 2017, Springer Tracts in Advanced Robotics.

[4]  J.M. Hollerbach,et al.  Identifying mass parameters for gravity compensation and automatic torque sensor calibration , 1996, Proceedings of IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation.

[5]  L. Phee,et al.  Ergonomic master controller for flexible endoscopic gastrointestinal robot manipulator , 2006, 2006 International Conference on Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Engineering.

[6]  S. J. Phee,et al.  Master and slave transluminal endoscopic robot (MASTER) for natural Orifice Transluminal Endoscopic Surgery (NOTES) , 2009, 2009 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.

[7]  Ming J. Tsai,et al.  Manipulability of manipulators , 1990 .

[8]  Tsuneo Yoshikawa,et al.  Manipulability of Robotic Mechanisms , 1985 .

[9]  Peter P. Pott,et al.  A new single-port robotic system based on a parallel kinematic structure , 2015, 2015 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS).

[10]  Sanghyun Joung,et al.  An all-joint-control master device for single-port laparoscopic surgery robots , 2016, International Journal of Computer Assisted Radiology and Surgery.

[11]  Guang-Zhong Yang,et al.  Design of a smart 3D-printed wristed robotic surgical instrument with embedded force sensing and modularity , 2016, 2016 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS).

[12]  Guang-Zhong Yang,et al.  Effective Manipulation in Confined Spaces of Highly Articulated Robotic Instruments for Single Access Surgery , 2017, IEEE Robotics and Automation Letters.