• Login
    View Item 
    •   etd@IISc
    • Division of Mechanical Sciences
    • Mechanical Engineering (ME)
    • View Item
    •   etd@IISc
    • Division of Mechanical Sciences
    • Mechanical Engineering (ME)
    • View Item
    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

    Static Balancing of Rigid-Body Linkages and Compliant Mechanisms

    View/Open
    G25579.pdf (3.017Mb)
    Date
    2018-03-07
    Author
    Sangamesh Deepak, R
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Static balance is the reduction or elimination of the actuating effort in quasi-static motion of a mechanical system by adding non-dissipative force interactions to the system. In recent years, there is increasing recognition that static balancing of elastic forces in compliant mechanisms leads to increased efficiency as well as good force feedback characteristics. The development of insightful and pragmatic design methods for statically balanced compliant mechanisms is the motivation for this work. In our approach, we focus on a class of compliant mechanisms that can be approximated as spring-loaded rigid-link mechanisms. Instead of developing static balancing techniques directly for the compliant mechanisms, we seek analytical balancing techniques for the simplified spring–loaded rigid–link approximations. Towards that, we first provide new static balancing techniques for a spring-loaded four-bar linkage. We also find relations between static balancing parameters of the cognates of a four-bar linkage. Later, we develop a new perfect static balancing method for a general n-degree-of-freedom revolute and spherical jointed rigid-body linkages. This general method distinguishes itself from the known techniques in the following respects: 1 It adds only springs and not any auxiliary bodies. 2 It is applicable to linkage shaving any number of links connected in any manner. 3 It is applicable to both constant(i.e., gravity type) and linear spring loads. 4 It works both in planar and spatial cases. This analytical method is applied on the approximated compliant mechanisms as well. Expectedly, the compliant mechanisms would only be approximately balanced. We study the effectiveness of this approximate balance through simulations and a prototype. The analytical static balancing technique for rigid-body linkages and the study of its application to approximated compliant mechanisms are among the main contributions of this thesis.
    URI
    https://etd.iisc.ac.in/handle/2005/3241
    Collections
    • Mechanical Engineering (ME) [382]

    Related items

    Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.

    • Development Of A Multi-Construct Framework For Assessing Work-Life Balance : Validation And Its Applicability In the Indian Context 

      Das, Madhurima (2016-09-09)
      Introduction Work-Life Balance is an area of interest to both researchers and organizations who strive to understand the various facets of work, life and work-life. For an individual and society today, balance is of ...
    • Errors In Delay Differentiation In Statistical Multiplexing 

      Mallesh, K (2010-03-03)
      Different applications of communication networks have different requirements that depend on the type of application. We consider the problem of differentiating between delay-sensitive applications based on their average ...
    • Delay Differentiation By Balancing Weighted Queue Lengths 

      Chakraborty, Avijit (2017-05-04)
      Scheduling policies adopted for statistical multiplexing should provide delay differentiation between different traffic classes, where each class represents an aggregate traffic of individual applications having same ...

    etd@IISc is a joint service of SERC & J R D Tata Memorial (JRDTML) Library || Powered by DSpace software || DuraSpace
    Contact Us | Send Feedback | Thesis Templates
    Theme by 
    Atmire NV
     

     

    Browse

    All of etd@IIScCommunities & CollectionsTitlesAuthorsAdvisorsSubjectsBy Thesis Submission DateThis CollectionTitlesAuthorsAdvisorsSubjectsBy Thesis Submission Date

    My Account

    LoginRegister

    etd@IISc is a joint service of SERC & J R D Tata Memorial (JRDTML) Library || Powered by DSpace software || DuraSpace
    Contact Us | Send Feedback | Thesis Templates
    Theme by 
    Atmire NV