Sergey Gusev

    Olympiyskiy pr. 1, Sochi, 354340 Russia
    Sirius University of Science and Technology

    Publications:

    Koziura K. K., Freidovich L. B., Gusev S. V., Shiriaev A. S., Fridman L. M.
    Abstract
    This paper addresses the problem of orbital stabilization of a periodic walking gait for a model or a digital twin of a three-link planar biped robot with a single actuator. A Lyapunov equation-based approach is proposed for the synthesis of a stabilizing controller for the corresponding impulsive mechanical system. The method ensures exponential vanishing of transverse coordinates, defining deviations from the nominal periodic trajectory, by solving Lyapunov matrix inequalities, which provide sufficient conditions for orbital stability of the closed-loop dynamics in the nominal case of no disturbances. The proposed approach allows systematic feedback controller design for impulsive systems, taking into account the discontinuities associated with a simplified model of the impact phase of walking.
    To ensure robustness against matched disturbances, an additional integral sliding mode (ISM) control law is introduced. The ISM component guarantees exact disturbance compensation (for a solution understood in the Filippov’s sense) from the initial moment of motion, ensuring that the perturbed system behaves identically to the nominal model from the very start. Theoretical results are validated through numerical simulations on a model of a three-link biped robot. The obtained results demonstrate that the proposed control law ensures stable periodic walking and significant reduction of deviations from the nominal gait, even under external perturbations.
    Keywords: compass-gait biped, orbital stabilization, Lyapunov equation, robust control, integral sliding mode, underactuated systems
    Citation: Koziura K. K., Freidovich L. B., Gusev S. V., Shiriaev A. S., Fridman L. M.,  Lyapunov Equation and Integral Sliding Mode-Based Robust Stabilization of a Periodic Trajectory for a Three-Link Planar Biped Robot, Rus. J. Nonlin. Dyn., 2026, Vol. 22, no. 1, pp.  27-44
    DOI:10.20537/nd260314
    Freidovich L. B., Aleshin P. E., Shiriaev A. S., Gusev S. V.
    Abstract
    Motivated by problems in robotic interaction control, we present a model-based method for robust orbital stabilization. Our objective is to design a time-invariant feedback law for a model of a nonlinear system, or for its digital twin, that makes the distance between its solutions and a planned periodic trajectory decay exponentially. The method uses transverse coordinates, which are functions that vanish on the orbit and remain independent in the firstorder approximation. We regulate the linearized dynamics of transverse coordinates to zero. The novelty of the method is that it replaces the projection-based modification of a stabilizing time-periodic controller with a combination of a time-invariant control law for a subsystem and a discontinuous sliding-mode term. The sliding-mode part forces the state to a switching manifold in finite time and provides robustness to matched uncertainties. We develop a stepby- step procedure and demonstrate its use by an academic example that consists of two masses coupled by a spring and actuated by an external control force. Although the procedure usually requires numerical approximations, this example allows all steps to be carried out analytically. We also discuss the corresponding design for the velocity-controlled case.
    Keywords: feedback control, orbital stabilization, transverse linearization, robustness to matched uncertainties, sliding-mode control, underactuated mechanical systems
    Citation: Freidovich L. B., Aleshin P. E., Shiriaev A. S., Gusev S. V.,  An Example of Robust Orbital Stabilization of a Periodic Behavior: Subspace and Sliding-Mode-Based Stabilization of Transverse Linearization, Rus. J. Nonlin. Dyn., 2026, Vol. 22, no. 1, pp.  5-26
    DOI:10.20537/nd260313
    Sumenkov O. Y., Kulminskiy D. D., Gusev S. V.
    Abstract
    This paper presents a practical approach to fully automated kinematic calibration of an industrial manipulator. The approach is based on the principle of plane constraint. The electrical signal is used to fix the moment of contact between the conductive tool and the flat surface. The measurement data are manipulator configurations (joint angles) at the moment of contact. A modification of the algorithm to deal with the scaling problem is also proposed. This approach provides both high calibration accuracy and lower cost of the experimental setup compared to coordinate measuring machines (CMMs), laser trackers, and vision systems. The article examines the impact of various methods of kinematic parameterization of manipulators: the Denavit – Hartenberg agreement (DH), product of exponentials (POE), as well as the complete and parametrically continuous model (CPC) on the calibration accuracy. A comparison is made of the open-loop and the proposed closed-loop calibration methods on the Puma 560 model known in the literature. POE parameters were converted to DH and CPC to compare accuracy after calibration based on these parameterizations. The method of computing POE-CPC transformation as a solution to a certain optimization problem is proposed. The problem of identifying geometric parameters in the presence of restrictions is solved by gradient optimization methods. Experiments have been carried out on an ABB IRB 1600 industrial manipulator with an installed conductive probe and an ABB IRBP A-500 robotic positioner with a conductive metal flat surface. A technique for indirectly checking the accuracy of calibration of kinematic parameters is proposed based on a study of the accuracy of manipulation when using these parameters. A comparison is made of the manipulation accuracy when using four sets of parameters: nominal parameters obtained during factory calibration with the Leica AT901B laser tracker and two sets of parameters obtained by applying the proposed calibration method. The kinematic parameters obtained from the experiment determine more accurately the position of the manipulator TCP for part of the configuration working space, even for areas that were not used for calibration.
    Keywords: industrial manipulators, close-loop calibration, kinematics conventions, parameter identification, product of exponentials, optimization methods
    Citation: Sumenkov O. Y., Kulminskiy D. D., Gusev S. V.,  Kinematic Calibration of an Industrial Manipulator without External Measurement Devices, Rus. J. Nonlin. Dyn., 2024, Vol. 20, no. 5, pp.  979-1001
    DOI:10.20537/nd241003

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