6 research outputs found

    Risk-sensitive motion planning for MAVs based on mission-related fault-tolerant analysis

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    Multirotor Aerial Vehicles may be fault-tolerant by design when rotor-failure is possible to measure or identify, especially when a large number of rotors are used. For instance, an octocopter can be capable to complete some missions even when a double-rotor fault occurs during the execution. In this paper, we study how a rotor-failure reduces the vehicle control admissible set and its importance with respect to the selected mission, i.e. we perform mission-related fault-tolerant analysis. Furthermore, we propose a risk-sensitive motion-planning algorithm capable to take into account the risks during the planning stage by means of mission-related fault-tolerant analysis. We show that the proposed approach is much less conservative in terms of selected performance measures than a conservative risk planner that assumes that the considered fault will certainly occur during the mission execution. As expected, the proposed risk-sensitive motion planner is also readier for accepting failures during the mission execution than the risk-insensitive approach that assumes no failure will occur

    Towards the Implementation of a MPC-based Planner on an Autonomous All-Terrain Vehicle

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    Planning and control for a wheeled mobile robot are challenging problems when poorly traversable terrains, including dynamic obstacles, are considered. To accomplish a mission, the control system should firstly guarantee the vehicle integrity, for example with respect to possible roll-over/tip-over phenomena. A fundamental contribution to achieve this goal, however, comes from the planner as well. In fact, computing a path that takes into account the terrain traversability, the kinematic and dynamic vehicle constraints, and the presence of dynamic obstacles, is a first and crucial step towards ensuring the vehicle integrity. The present paper addresses some of the aforementioned issues, describing the hardware/software architecture of the planning and control system of an autonomous All-Terrain Mobile Robot and the implementation of a real-time path planner

    Mobile robot navigation using passivity-based MPC

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