Estimating Properties of Solid Particles Inside Container using Touch Sensing

Xiaofeng Guo, Hung-Jui Huang, and Wenzhen Yuan

Carnegie Mellon University

Abstract


Solid particles, such as rice and coffee beans, are commonly stored in containers and are ubiquitous in our daily lives. Understanding those particles’ properties could help us make later decisions or perform later manipulation tasks such as pouring. Humans typically interact with the containers to get an understanding of the particles inside them, but it is still a challenge for robots to achieve that. This work utilizes tactile sensing to estimate multiple properties of solid particles enclosed in the container, specifically, content mass, content volume, particle size, and particle shape. We design a sequence of robot actions to interact with the container. Based on physical understanding, we extract static force/torque value from the F/T sensor, vibration-related features and topple-related features from the newly designed high-speed GelSight tactile sensor to estimate those four particle properties. We test our method on 37 very different daily particles, including powder, rice, beans, tablets, etc. Experiments show that our method is able to estimate content mass with 1.8 g error, content volume with 6.1 ml error, particle size with 1.1 mm error and achieves an accuracy of 75.6% for particle shape estimation. In addition, our method can generalize to unseen particles with unknown volumes. By estimating these particle properties, our method can help robots to better perceive the granular media and help with different manipulation tasks in daily life and industry. 

Presenstation


content_estimation_IROS2023_present_video.mp4