ORNL   
 MSSE Division   EES Directorate   ORNL 
Robotics and Energetic Systems     Measurement Science and Systems Engineering Division

Home

Contact

Staff

Publications List

Technology Fact Sheets

Welcome

The Robotics and Energetic Systems (RES) Group's capabilities and interests range from basic research—with fundamental development in motion planning, reasoning methodology, and advanced controls—to one-of-a-kind integrated system design, development, testing, and evaluation.  Major areas of research and development include sensor-based robotics (including mobile robots, advanced manipulators, and combined mobility manipulation systems), human-amplifying machines (including technologies for exoskeletons, human-assist systems, strength-amplifying machines, and prosthetics), power transfer devices (actuation technologies), and energy-transformation systems (mostly for portable energy supplies).  Areas in which the group has developed exceptional capabilities include fluidics actuation and controls, both for high-precision and high-payload (multi-ton) systems and for mesoscale (millimeter to centimeter scale) systems; omnidirectional and holonomic mobility systems (an area in which RES holds a number of patents and an R&D-100 award); human-strength-amplification systems and controls; biomedical robotics (automated surgical assisting robots, prosthetics, rehabilitation-assist devices); actuation technologies for robotic operations in high-temperature environments; advanced logistics systems (cargo and weapons transport and handling); and microassembly (assembly of microscale/nanoscale components for three-dimensional micromachines).

 NEWS

 

No Current News

 

 EVENTS

 

No Current Events


RESEARCH AREAS

Energy Transformation Systems

Human-Amplifying Machines

Power Transfer and Actuation

Robotics

 

Robotics

robotics

Human-Amplifying Machines

hamgroup

 

Power Transfer and Actuation

powertransferactuation

Energy Transformation Systems

energytransformation

 

Home | ORNL Home | Measurement Science and Systems Engineering Division | Disclaimer | Webmaster

Last Updated:  August 13, 2009