11.3 - Kinematic Analysis
Kinematic Analysis
For this report, link 1 is ground, link 2 is the crank, link 3 is the connecting rod, and link 4 connects link 3 to the ground. Point A is the connection point between links 2 and 3 and point B is the connection point between links 3 and 4. Point P is the location of water bottle’s cap, and the end-effector as a whole lies along the line connecting points B and P.
The system parameters are as follows:
L1 = 4.5048 inches
L2 = 2.5224 inches
L3 = 4.5336 inches
L4 = 2.631 inches
AP = 6.993 inches
θ1 = 110°
∠BAP = 6.971°
ω2 = -7.1 rad/s
Our linkage system is composed of a singular fourbar loop. A kinematic diagram is shown below in Figure 11.3.1.
Gruebler Equation
Number of Links (L) = 4
Number of Full Joints (J1) = 4
Number of Half Joins (J2) = 0
M = 3(L - 1) - 2J1 - J2 = 3(4 - 1) - 2(4) - 0 = 1
Our mechanism will have 1 degree of freedom, which is all a mechanism like this needs.
Grahof Condition
Shortest Link (S) = 2.5224 in
Longest Link (L) = 4.5336 in
Other Links (P, Q) = 4.5048 in, 2.631 in
S + L = 7.058 in
P + Q = 7.1358 in
Because S + L ≤ P + Q, this linkage meets the Grashof condition, meaning at least one link can make a full rotation. This is ideal because we intend to control it with a single motor without sensors.
Position, Velocity, and Acceleration Analysis
Shown below in Figures 11.3.2 - 11.3.6 are the position, angle, velocity, acceleration, and mechanical advantage profiles of our linkage configuration (for the bottle cap specifically, as that is the main point of interest). For the position, angle, and velocity the ideal profiles are overlaid onto the theoretical profiles for the purpose of comparison. Across the board, these ideal profiles align with the theoretical ones quite nicely. We’ve also included an animation of the linkage, shown in Figure 11.3.7.
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