55 research outputs found
Task-Priority Control of Redundant Robotic Systems using Control Lyapunov and Control Barrier Function based Quadratic Programs
This paper presents a novel task-priority control framework for redundant
robotic systems based on a hierarchy of control Lyapunov function (CLF) and
control barrier function (CBF) based quadratic programs (QPs). The proposed
method guarantees strict priority among different groups of tasks such as
safety-related, operational and optimization tasks. Moreover, a soft priority
measure in the form of penalty parameters can be employed to prioritize tasks
at the same priority level. As opposed to kinematic control schemes, the
proposed framework is a holistic approach to control of redundant robotic
systems, which solves the redundancy resolution, dynamic control and control
allocation problems simultaneously. Numerical simulations of a hyper-redundant
articulated intervention autonomous underwater vehicle (AIAUV) is presented to
validate the proposed framework.Comment: 21st IFAC World Congres
Singularity-free Formation Path Following of Underactuated AUVs: Extended Version
This paper proposes a method for formation path following control of a fleet
of underactuated autonomous underwater vehicles. The proposed method combines
several hierarchic tasks in a null space-based behavioral algorithm to safely
guide the vehicles. Compared to the existing literature, the algorithm includes
both inter-vehicle and obstacle collision avoidance, and employs a scheme that
keeps the vehicles within given operation limits. The algorithm is applied to a
six degree-of-freedom model, using rotation matrices to describe the attitude
to avoid singularities. Using the results of cascaded systems theory, we prove
that the closed-loop system is uniformly semiglobally exponentially stable. We
use numerical simulations to validate the results.Comment: Extended version of a paper, to appear in Proc. 2023 IFAC World
Congress, 13 pages (9p + 4p appendices), 5 figure
Stability analysis of snake robot locomotion based on Poincaré maps
Abstract — This paper presents an analysis of snake locomotion that explains how non-uniform viscous ground friction conditions enable snake robots to locomote forward on a planar surface. The explanation is based on a simple mapping from link velocities normal to the direction of motion into propulsive forces in the direction of motion. From this analysis, a controller for a snake robot is proposed. A Poincaré map is employed to prove that all state variables of the snake robot, except for the position in the forward direction, trace out an exponentially stable periodic orbit. I
Output feedback tracking of ships
Abstract-In this brief, we consider output feedback tracking of ships with position and orientation measurements only. Ship dynamics are highly nonlinear, and for tracking control, as opposed to dynamic positioning, these nonlinearities have to be taken into account in the control design. We propose an observer-controller scheme which takes into account the complete ship dynamics, including Coriolis and centripetal forces and nonlinear damping, and results in a semi-globally uniformly stable closed-loop system. Furthermore, a gain tuning procedure for the observer-controller scheme is developed. Experimental results are presented where the observer-controller scheme is implemented onboard a Froude scaled 1:70 model supply ship. The experimentally obtained results are compared with simulation results under ideal conditions and both support the theoretical results on semi-global exponential stability of the closed-loop system
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