Freedom and constraint topologies


Freedom and constraint topologies is a mechanical design framework developed by Dr. Jonathan B. Hopkins. The framework offers a library of vector spaces with visual representations to guide the analysis and synthesis of flexible systems. Flexible systems are devices, mechanisms, or structures that deform to achieve desired motion such as compliant mechanisms, flexures, soft robots, and mechanical metamaterials.

History

The FACT design approach was created in 2005 by Jonathan Brigham Hopkins while a Master’s student in ’s Precision Compliant Systems Laboratory at MIT. FACT was first published in a short conference paper in the 2006 proceedings of the 21st Annual Meeting of the American Society for Precision Engineering and was later published in depth in Hopkins’ 2007 Master's thesis. FACT has been expanded in later works such as Hopkins' 2010 PhD Thesis.

Alternatives

Other compliant mechanism design methods include generative design, pseudo-rigid-body analysis, and other constraint-based and -based design approaches. See the main article for pros and cons of kinematics and structural optimization.

Fundamentals

FACT combines principles of screw theory, linear algebra, projective geometry, and exact-constraint design. The methodology employs a library of vector spaces derived from these principles and represented by geometric shapes. These shapes are categorized into freedom spaces, constraint spaces, and actuation spaces, each serving a unique purpose in the design process.
The FACT library allows traversal of the complete solution space of flexible systems for any combination of degrees of freedom. The rules of FACT vary depending on the configuration of the flexible system desired. Here are the basic steps to design a parallel flexure bearing.
  1. Determine how the stage should move. What degrees of freedom are needed?
  2. Find the matching freedom space in the FACT library
  3. Identify the constraint space matching the required freedom space
  4. Select and arrange flexible elements that satisfy the constraint space. According to Maxwell, the degrees of constraint and degrees of freedom must sum to 6 for the system to be exactly constrained
  5. Design the rigid bodies and connect each flexture to each body at their ends. When one body is held fixed, it becomes the "ground". The other body then attains the chosen DOF.
Sometimes it may be desirable to over-constrain the system by adding redundant constraints within the constraint space. This adds stiffness and may be required for symmetry, which can improve thermal stability.

Limitations

All flexible systems can be organized according to three primary configurations – parallel, serial, and hybrid. FACT alone covers parallel, serial, and some hybrid systems.
  • Parallel systems consist of two rigid bodies connected directly together by parallel flexible elements.
  • Serial systems consist of two or more parallel systems stacked or nested in a chain from one rigid body to the next.
  • Hybrid systems consist of any other configuration of parallel and serial system combinations.
  • *Interconnected hybrid systems are a special kind of hybrid configuration where intermediate rigid bodies are also interconnected together by flexible elements, which create internal loops within the system. FACT must be supplemented with Graph theory in order to handle such systems. Mechanical metamaterials fall in this category.

    Further Learning

FACT is covered in various educational resources:
  • It is taught in a graduate class at UCLA by Dr. Hopkins.
  • The course is available on YouTube via the channel "The FACTs of Mechanical Design" as a free lecture series.
  • The book "Handbook of Compliant Mechanisms" discusses FACT within the context of compliant mechanism design.