16 research outputs found

    Unlimited-wokspace teleoperation

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    Thesis (Master)--Izmir Institute of Technology, Mechanical Engineering, Izmir, 2012Includes bibliographical references (leaves: 100-105)Text in English; Abstract: Turkish and Englishxiv, 109 leavesTeleoperation is, in its brief description, operating a vehicle or a manipulator from a distance. Teleoperation is used to reduce mission cost, protect humans from accidents that can be occurred during the mission, and perform complex missions for tasks that take place in areas which are difficult to reach or dangerous for humans. Teleoperation is divided into two main categories as unilateral and bilateral teleoperation according to information flow. This flow can be configured to be in either one direction (only from master to slave) or two directions (from master to slave and from slave to master). In unlimited-workspace teleoperation, one of the types of bilateral teleoperation, mobile robots are controlled by the operator and environmental information is transferred from the mobile robot to the operator. Teleoperated vehicles can be used in a variety of missions in air, on ground and in water. Therefore, different constructional types of robots can be designed for the different types of missions. This thesis aims to design and develop an unlimited-workspace teleoperation which includes an omnidirectional mobile robot as the slave system to be used in further researches. Initially, an omnidirectional mobile robot was manufactured and robot-operator interaction and efficient data transfer was provided with the established communication line. Wheel velocities were measured in real-time by Hall-effect sensors mounted on robot chassis to be integrated in controllers. A dynamic obstacle detection system, which is suitable for omnidirectional mobility, was developed and two obstacle avoidance algorithms (semi-autonomous and force reflecting) were created and tested. Distance information between the robot and the obstacles was collected by an array of sensors mounted on the robot. In the semi-autonomous teleoperation scenario, distance information is used to avoid obstacles autonomously and in the force-reflecting teleoperation scenario obstacles are informed to the user by sending back the artificially created forces acting on the slave robot. The test results indicate that obstacle avoidance performance of the developed vehicle with two algorithms is acceptable in all test scenarios. In addition, two control models were developed (kinematic and dynamic control) for the local controller of the slave robot. Also, kinematic controller was supported by gyroscope

    Feedback Control of a Class of Nonholonomic Hamiltonian Systems

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    Feasible, Robust and Reliable Automation and Control for Autonomous Systems

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    The Special Issue book focuses on highlighting current research and developments in the automation and control field for autonomous systems as well as showcasing state-of-the-art control strategy approaches for autonomous platforms. The book is co-edited by distinguished international control system experts currently based in Sweden, the United States of America, and the United Kingdom, with contributions from reputable researchers from China, Austria, France, the United States of America, Poland, and Hungary, among many others. The editors believe the ten articles published within this Special Issue will be highly appealing to control-systems-related researchers in applications typified in the fields of ground, aerial, maritime vehicles, and robotics as well as industrial audiences

    A driver model with supervision aspects

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    Human driver compensatory reactions -- Driver intelligence and Path Tracking (supervision) -- From human decision making to design of control level -- Vehicle models -- History of driver models -- Controller for car-like mobile robots -- Control problems of vehicle cartesian coordiantes -- Independent speed control with geometric lateral-offset tracking -- Kinematics dynamics and control of a car-like mobile robot -- Looking ahead path tracking of a car-like mobile robot -- Geometric lateral-offset tracking and speed control of a car-like mobile robot -- Equations of motion of a car-like robot using autolev programming

    Advanced Mobile Robotics: Volume 3

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    Mobile robotics is a challenging field with great potential. It covers disciplines including electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, computer science, cognitive science, and social science. It is essential to the design of automated robots, in combination with artificial intelligence, vision, and sensor technologies. Mobile robots are widely used for surveillance, guidance, transportation and entertainment tasks, as well as medical applications. This Special Issue intends to concentrate on recent developments concerning mobile robots and the research surrounding them to enhance studies on the fundamental problems observed in the robots. Various multidisciplinary approaches and integrative contributions including navigation, learning and adaptation, networked system, biologically inspired robots and cognitive methods are welcome contributions to this Special Issue, both from a research and an application perspective

    Towards Semi-Autonomous Control of Heavy-Duty Tracked Earth-Moving Mobile Manipulators : Use Case: The Bulldozer

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    A mobile manipulator (MM) comprises a manipulator attached to a mobile base, making it capable of manipulation tasks in large workspaces. In the field of construction, heavy-duty MMs are extensively used for soil excavation at construction sites. One such machine is the bulldozer, which is widely used because of its robustness and maneuverability. With its onboard blade, the bulldozer shapes terrain and transports soil material by pushing it. However, operating the blade with joysticks to accurately shape the terrain surface and moving material productively are difficult tasks that require extensive training and experience. Automating the motion of the blade, therefore, has the potential to reduce skill requirements, improve productivity, and reduce operators’ workloads. This thesis studies and develops methods for the semi-autonomous control of a bulldozer to increase surface quality and earthmoving productivity. These goals were reflected in the main research problems (RPs). Furthermore, as bulldozers drive over the terrain shape generated by the blade, the RPs are coupled because earthmoving productivity is partially dependent on surface quality. The RPs and their coupling were addressed in four publications by coordinating the mobile base and manipulator control and by using the surrounding terrain shape in automatic blade motion reference computations. Challenges to automatic control emerge from the tracked mobile platform driving on rough terrain while the manipulator tool interacts with the soil. It is shown in the first two publications that coordinating the control of the MM mobile base and blade manipulator subsystems can improve surface quality and productivity by temporarily slowing down the machine when the required manipulator joint rates increase or when the tractive performance reduces. The third publication showed that feedforward–feedback control of the blade manipulator can be used on a real-world bulldozer for accurate terrain shaping. The thesis work culminates in the final publication with an experimental implementation of a semi-autonomous blade control system that continuously maps the worksite terrain and uses it to compute the required blade motion

    Proceedings of the European Conference on Agricultural Engineering AgEng2021

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    This proceedings book results from the AgEng2021 Agricultural Engineering Conference under auspices of the European Society of Agricultural Engineers, held in an online format based on the University of Évora, Portugal, from 4 to 8 July 2021. This book contains the full papers of a selection of abstracts that were the base for the oral presentations and posters presented at the conference. Presentations were distributed in eleven thematic areas: Artificial Intelligence, data processing and management; Automation, robotics and sensor technology; Circular Economy; Education and Rural development; Energy and bioenergy; Integrated and sustainable Farming systems; New application technologies and mechanisation; Post-harvest technologies; Smart farming / Precision agriculture; Soil, land and water engineering; Sustainable production in Farm buildings

    Performance and Safety Enhancement Strategies in Vehicle Dynamics and Ground Contact

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    Recent trends in vehicle engineering are testament to the great efforts that scientists and industries have made to seek solutions to enhance both the performance and safety of vehicular systems. This Special Issue aims to contribute to the study of modern vehicle dynamics, attracting recent experimental and in-simulation advances that are the basis for current technological growth and future mobility. The area involves research, studies, and projects derived from vehicle dynamics that aim to enhance vehicle performance in terms of handling, comfort, and adherence, and to examine safety optimization in the emerging contexts of smart, connected, and autonomous driving.This Special Issue focuses on new findings in the following topics:(1) Experimental and modelling activities that aim to investigate interaction phenomena from the macroscale, analyzing vehicle data, to the microscale, accounting for local contact mechanics; (2) Control strategies focused on vehicle performance enhancement, in terms of handling/grip, comfort and safety for passengers, motorsports, and future mobility scenarios; (3) Innovative technologies to improve the safety and performance of the vehicle and its subsystems; (4) Identification of vehicle and tire/wheel model parameters and status with innovative methodologies and algorithms; (5) Implementation of real-time software, logics, and models in onboard architectures and driving simulators; (6) Studies and analyses oriented toward the correlation among the factors affecting vehicle performance and safety; (7) Application use cases in road and off-road vehicles, e-bikes, motorcycles, buses, trucks, etc
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