Collaborative Mobile Robots
Northwestern University’s Center for Robotics and Biosystems has developed collaborative robots for human-robot collaboration.
![collaborative-robots-collaborative-manipulation.jpg](https://minio.news.mecharithm.com:443/mecharithm/collaborative_robots_collaborative_manipulation_2eeb42467e.jpg)
In the experiment, three Omnid mobile collaborative robots (mobile cobots) are carrying a large pipe, and they float the pipe so that it has six degrees of freedom (three for positions: x, y, and z movements, and three for orientations: roll, pitch, and yaw rotations) and can easily be controlled by a human operator. Delta robots are three dofs series-elastic manipulators and mobile bases feature three-dof mecanum omnidirectional wheels.
![collaborative-robots-delta-robot-mobile-base.jpg](https://minio.news.mecharithm.com:443/mecharithm/collaborative_robots_delta_robot_mobile_base_de2e3577a0.jpg)
Our comprehensive lesson below provides more information on degrees of freedom for robots:
The collaborative robots are controlled by a distributed control system that enables increasing the number of robots involved in the collaborative manipulation.
More information: