Author: Matoso, J.V.E.
Paper Title Page
TUMBCMO34 Motion Control Architecture and Kinematics for Multi-DoF Kirkpatrick-Baez Focusing Mirrors System at LNLS-Sirius 443
 
  • J.P.S. Furtado, C.S.N.C. Bueno, J.V.E. Matoso, M.A. Montevechi Filho, G.B.Z.L. Moreno, T.R. Silva Soares
    LNLS, Campinas, Brazil
 
  Funding: Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MCTI)
In modern 4th generation synchrotron facilities, piezo actuators are widely applied due to their nanometric precision in linear motion and stability. This work shows the implementation of a switching control architecture and a tripod kinematics for a set of 4 piezo actuators, responsible by positioning the short-stroke: the vertical and horizontal focusing mirrors of the Kirkpatrick-Baez mirror system at MOGNO Beamline (X-Ray Microtomography). The switching control architecture was chosen to balance timing to move through the working range (changing the beam incidence on stripes of low/high energy), resolution and infrastructure costs. This paper also shows the implementation and results of the developed kinematics by layers that uncouples short-stroke from long-stroke to fix any parasitic displacements that occur on the granite bench levelers due to slippage during the movement and to match the required beam stability without losing alignment flexibility or adjustment repeatability. The architecture was built between a PIMikroMove set of driver-actuators and an Omron Delta Tau Power Brick controller due to its standardization across the control systems solutions at Sirius, ease of control software scalability and its capability to perform calculations and signal switching for control in C language, with real-time performance to make adjustments to the angles responsible by focusing the beam in a speed that matches the required position stability, guaranteeing the necessary resolution for the experiments.
 
slides icon Slides TUMBCMO34 [1.753 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2023-TUMBCMO34  
About • Received ※ 06 October 2023 — Revised ※ 12 October 2023 — Accepted ※ 28 November 2023 — Issued ※ 08 December 2023
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TUPDP005 Improvements on Kinematics and Control of Granite Benches at LNLS-Sirius 485
 
  • J.V.E. Matoso, J.P.S. Furtado, J.P.B. Ishida, T.R. Silva Soares
    LNLS, Campinas, Brazil
 
  At the Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory, the radiation beam is conditioned by optical elements that must be positioned with high stability and precision. Many of the optical elements are positioned using granite benches that provide high coupling stiffness to the ground and position control in up to six degrees of freedom, using a set of stepper motors. The solution of the inverse kinematics was done numerically by the Newton Raphson method. By employing the property that these systems have small rotation angles, the Jacobian matrix used in this numerical method can be simplified to reduce computational execution time and allow high processing rates. This paper also shows the results of adding a notch filter to the position servo control loop of the granite benches to increase stability due to their mass-spring-damper characteristics. The kinematics and control of the granite benches are implemented in an Omron Power Brick LV controller, with the kinematics developed in MATLAB and the C-code generated by MATLAB C-Coder. Reducing the execution time of the kinematics improves the efficient use of the computational resources and allows the real-time clock rate to be increased.  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2023-TUPDP005  
About • Received ※ 05 October 2023 — Revised ※ 10 October 2023 — Accepted ※ 29 November 2023 — Issued ※ 04 December 2023
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