96,843 research outputs found

    A novel high-fidelity unscented particle filtering method for the accurate state of charge estimation of lithium-ion batteries.

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    Power Li-ion batteries are one of the core "three powers" systems of new energy vehicles, and its accurate batteries modeling and state prediction have become the core technology of the scientific and technological progress in the industry. This paper takes the ternary Li-ion batteries as the research subject. Aiming at the mathematical expressions of different structural features, innovatively construct a second-order Thevenin equivalent circuit model with autoregressive effect. This model can characterize the internal reaction mechanism of Li-ion batteries and fit the complex electrochemical reactions inside the battery. An improved particle filter model, namely a new high-fidelity unscented particle filter method, is designed and established. By introducing a suitable suggested density function, the model can accurately calculate the mean and variance, solve the particle degradation problem, and find out the Li-ion batteries state of charge, which is suitable for complex charging and discharging conditions. By further improving the theoretical analysis and combining with experiments under different working conditions, this method studies the Li-ion batteries state of charge. The test results show that the average absolute error of the improved equivalent circuit model is reduced by 0.00457 V, and the error rate is stably kept within 1%, which has the ability to describe Li-ion batteries well. When using the high-fidelity unscented particle filter algorithm to estimate the state of charge of the lithium battery, the robustness of the system is improved, the following effect is better, and the estimation error is controlled within 1.5%, which brings good practical value to the power Li-ion batteries

    AUV SLAM and experiments using a mechanical scanning forward-looking sonar

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    Navigation technology is one of the most important challenges in the applications of autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) which navigate in the complex undersea environment. The ability of localizing a robot and accurately mapping its surroundings simultaneously, namely the simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM) problem, is a key prerequisite of truly autonomous robots. In this paper, a modified-FastSLAM algorithm is proposed and used in the navigation for our C-Ranger research platform, an open-frame AUV. A mechanical scanning imaging sonar is chosen as the active sensor for the AUV. The modified-FastSLAM implements the update relying on the on-board sensors of C-Ranger. On the other hand, the algorithm employs the data association which combines the single particle maximum likelihood method with modified negative evidence method, and uses the rank-based resampling to overcome the particle depletion problem. In order to verify the feasibility of the proposed methods, both simulation experiments and sea trials for C-Ranger are conducted. The experimental results show the modified-FastSLAM employed for the navigation of the C-Ranger AUV is much more effective and accurate compared with the traditional methods

    Joint space-time trellis code detection and MIMO equalisation via particle filtering

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    Dynamic filtering of static dipoles in magnetoencephalography

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    We consider the problem of estimating neural activity from measurements of the magnetic fields recorded by magnetoencephalography. We exploit the temporal structure of the problem and model the neural current as a collection of evolving current dipoles, which appear and disappear, but whose locations are constant throughout their lifetime. This fully reflects the physiological interpretation of the model. In order to conduct inference under this proposed model, it was necessary to develop an algorithm based around state-of-the-art sequential Monte Carlo methods employing carefully designed importance distributions. Previous work employed a bootstrap filter and an artificial dynamic structure where dipoles performed a random walk in space, yielding nonphysical artefacts in the reconstructions; such artefacts are not observed when using the proposed model. The algorithm is validated with simulated data, in which it provided an average localisation error which is approximately half that of the bootstrap filter. An application to complex real data derived from a somatosensory experiment is presented. Assessment of model fit via marginal likelihood showed a clear preference for the proposed model and the associated reconstructions show better localisation

    Getting Started with Particle Metropolis-Hastings for Inference in Nonlinear Dynamical Models

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    This tutorial provides a gentle introduction to the particle Metropolis-Hastings (PMH) algorithm for parameter inference in nonlinear state-space models together with a software implementation in the statistical programming language R. We employ a step-by-step approach to develop an implementation of the PMH algorithm (and the particle filter within) together with the reader. This final implementation is also available as the package pmhtutorial in the CRAN repository. Throughout the tutorial, we provide some intuition as to how the algorithm operates and discuss some solutions to problems that might occur in practice. To illustrate the use of PMH, we consider parameter inference in a linear Gaussian state-space model with synthetic data and a nonlinear stochastic volatility model with real-world data.Comment: 41 pages, 7 figures. In press for Journal of Statistical Software. Source code for R, Python and MATLAB available at: https://github.com/compops/pmh-tutoria

    Particle Filter Design Using Importance Sampling for Acoustic Source Localisation and Tracking in Reverberant Environments

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    Sequential Monte Carlo methods have been recently proposed to deal with the problem of acoustic source localisation and tracking using an array of microphones. Previous implementations make use of the basic bootstrap particle filter, whereas a more general approach involves the concept of importance sampling. In this paper, we develop a new particle filter for acoustic source localisation using importance sampling, and compare its tracking ability with that of a bootstrap algorithm proposed previously in the literature. Experimental results obtained with simulated reverberant samples and real audio recordings demonstrate that the new algorithm is more suitable for practical applications due to its reinitialisation capabilities, despite showing a slightly lower average tracking accuracy. A real-time implementation of the algorithm also shows that the proposed particle filter can reliably track a person talking in real reverberant rooms.This paper was performed while Eric A. Lehmann was working with National ICT Australia. National ICT Australia is funded by the Australian Government’s Department of Communications, Information Technology, and the Arts, the Australian Research Council, through Backing Australia’s Ability, and the ICT Centre of Excellence programs
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