Decoupling Torque and Stiffness: A Unified Modeling and Control Framework for Antagonistic Artificial Muscles

arXiv:2511.09104v3 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Antagonistic artificial muscles can decouple joint torque and stiffness, but contact transients often degrade this independence. We present a unified real-time framework applicable across pneumatic, electrohydraulic, and dielectric elastomer artificial muscle families: a separable Pad\'e force model with a minimal two-state dynamic wrapper, a cascaded inverse-dynamics controller in co-contraction/bias coordinates, and a bio-inspired depth-adaptive interaction policy that schedules stiffness based on penetration depth. The controller runs in under 1 ms per control tick and demonstrates independent torque and stiffness tracking, including a fixed-torque stiffness-step test that preserves torque regulation through stiffness transitions. In a coupled impedance contact protocol simulated across soft-to-rigid environments, comparing depth-adaptive stiffness to fixed-stiffness baselines reveals a shock/load versus stability tradeoff. These results provide a control-oriented foundation for musculoskeletal antagonistic robots to execute adaptive impedance behaviors in dynamic interactions.

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