1 / 23

ECE 450 Introduction to Robotics

ECE 450 Introduction to Robotics. Section: 50883 Instructor: Linda A. Gee 10/14/99 Lecture 12. Dead Reckoning. Term Dead Reckoning was derived from a former sailing term: Deduced Reckoning

paki-estes
Télécharger la présentation

ECE 450 Introduction to Robotics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ECE 450 Introduction to Robotics Section: 50883 Instructor: Linda A. Gee 10/14/99 Lecture 12

  2. Dead Reckoning • Term Dead Reckoning was derived from a former sailing term: Deduced Reckoning • Mathematical procedure to determine present location of an object by advancing previous position through known course and velocity

  3. Dead Reckoning cont’d • To calculate heading, the system counts the wheel rotations to obtain longitudinal displacement and uses frictional driven steering • Implementations • Odometry: instrumentation with optical encoders coupled with motor armatures or wheel axes • Magnetic or Inductive proximity sensors with velocity feedback information

  4. Heading • Function is derived from an onboard steering angle sensor • Supplied by a magnetic compass or gyro • Calculated from differential odometry • incremental displacement along a path that is broken into x, y components in terms of elapsed time and distance traveled • xn+1 = xn + D sin • yn+1 = yn + Dcos

  5. Brush encoders Potentiometers Synchros Resolves Optical encoders Magnetic encoders Inductive encoders Capacitive encoders Odometry Sensors Rotational displacement and velocity sensors

  6. Potentiometers • Low cost rotational displacement sensors • Easy sensors to integrate • Apply voltage divider • Disadvantage: poor reliability due to dust and dirt build up

  7. Synchros • Rotating electromagnetic device that transmits angular information electrically • Forms a variable-coupling transformer • Types of synchros • transmitters, receivers • differentials • control transformers, linear transformers • resolvers, differential resolvers • transolvers

  8. Synchros cont’d • Most widely used synchro: • 3-phase transmitter/receiver pair • Synchro receiver is electrically identical to the transmitter

  9. Resolver • Special configuration of the synchro • Gives voltages proportional to the sin and cos of the rotor angle • Offers a rugged, reliable means for quantifying absolute angular position • Advantages: accurate, low cost, small physical requirements

  10. Optical Encoders • Developed in the mid-1940s by the Baldwin Piano Company for electric organs to mimic the sound of other musical instruments • Advantages: digital output, low cost, reliable, immune to noise • Types of encoders • incremental • absolute

  11. Incremental Encoders • Easier to integrate than absolute encoders • Example: • Single channel tachometer encoder uses square wave pulses for each shaft revolution • Trade-off: resolution vs. rate • Phase quadrature incremental encoders are immune to low speed instabilities due to the use of a second channel

  12. Absolute Encoders • Used for slower rotational applications • Infrequent rotations • steering angle • Disadvantages • Not tolerant of power interruption • Operational limitations with temperature

  13. Doppler and Inertial Navigation • These techniques are employed to reduce the effects of slippage during navigation • Doppler Navigation • used in maritime and aeronautical applications to yield velocity measurements • principle of operation: based on Doppler shift in frequency observed when radiated energy reflects from a surface that is moving with respect to the emitter

  14. Doppler Navigation cont’d • Other applications of Doppler Navigation include • Maritime systems: acoustical energy is reflected from the ocean floor • Airborne systems: sense microwave RF energy bouncing off the surface of the earth

  15. Inertial Navigation • Developed originally for the deployment of aircraft • Technique later applied to missles and nuclear submarines • Inertial Navigation • Principle of operation: senses minute accelerations in each directional axes; integrating over time to derive velocity and position • uses gyroscopes and accelerometers

  16. Design Issues for Drive and Steering Configurations • Maneuverability • translate or change direction of motion with respect to the environment • Controllability • hardware, software to control mobility • Traction • minimize slippage under variable conditions • Climbing • traverse discontinuities in floor or ground surface

  17. Design Issues cont’d • Stability • sufficient stability for the payload to address • safety, accleration, tilt, and roll • Efficiency • power consumption and conservation issues • Maintenance • ease of maintaining components functionally

  18. Design Issues concluded • Environmental impact • drive and steering mechanisms do not impace the floor or ground • Navigational considerations • dead reckoning considerations with respect to the surroundings

  19. Navigational Approaches • Differential Steering • consists of two individually controlled wheels • spin in place • maneuver through congested areas • Ackerman Steering • automotive industry uses this approach • inside front wheel rotates at a sharper angle than the outside wheel in a turn • reduces tire slippage • provides accurate dead reckoning • good choice for outdoor autonomous vehicles

  20. Navigational Approaches cont’d • Synchro Drive • uses three or more wheels that are mechanically coupled • wheels rotate in the same direction at the same speed • offers reduced slippage since all wheels generate equal and parallel force vectors at all times • three-point configuration works well for stability and traction • use a steering angle encoder to address heading

  21. Navigational Approaches cont’d • Tricycle Drive • uses a single driven front wheel • two passive rear wheels • center of gravity moves away from the front wheel when approaching an incline which leads to loss of traction

  22. Navigational Approaches concluded • Omni-Directional Drive • Derive the position and velocity from the motor in terms of • tangential velocity of each wheel • rotational speed of each motor • rotational rate of the base • wheel radius

  23. Internal Position Error Correction • Uses absolute encoders to comprise a compliant linkage rotary encoders • Compliant linkage addresses • momentary controller errors without transferring any force • eliminates wheel slippage • Provides heading reference information in terms of world coordinates

More Related