English

Low-Cost Fiducial-based 6-Axis Force-Torque Sensor

Robotics 2020-06-01 v1

Abstract

Commercial six-axis force-torque sensors suffer from being some combination of expensive, fragile, and hard-to-use. We propose a new fiducial-based design which addresses all three points. The sensor uses an inexpensive webcam and can be fabricated using a consumer-grade 3D printer. Open-source software is used to estimate the 3D pose of the fiducials on the sensor, which is then used to calculate the applied force-torque. A browser-based (installation free) interface demonstrates ease-of-use. The sensor is very light and can be dropped or thrown with little concern. We characterize our prototype in dynamic conditions under compound loading, finding a mean R2R^2 of over 0.99 for the Fx,Fy,MxF_x, F_y, M_x, and MyM_y axes, and over 0.87 and 0.90 for the FzF_z and MzM_z axes respectively. The open source design files allow the sensor to be adapted for diverse applications ranging from robot fingers to human-computer interfaces, while the sdesign principle allows for quick changes with minimal technical expertise. This approach promises to bring six-axis force-torque sensing to new applications where the precision, cost, and fragility of traditional strain-gauge based sensors are not appropriate. The open-source sensor design can be viewed at http://sites.google.com/view/fiducialforcesensor.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2005.14250,
  title  = {Low-Cost Fiducial-based 6-Axis Force-Torque Sensor},
  author = {Rui Ouyang and Robert Howe},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2005.14250},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

2020 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation

R2 v1 2026-06-23T15:53:44.113Z