Reducing actuator switchings for motion control of autonomous underwater vehicles


Autoria(s): Chyba, Monique; Grammatico, Sergio; Huynh, Van T.; Marriott, John; Piccoli, Benedetto; Smith, Ryan N.
Data(s)

01/06/2013

Resumo

A priority when designing control strategies for autonomous underwater vehicles is to emphasize their cost of implementation on a real vehicle and at the same time to minimize a prescribed criterion such as time, energy, payload or combination of those. Indeed, the major issue is that due to the vehicles' design and the actuation modes usually under consideration for underwater platforms the number of actuator switchings must be kept to a small value to ensure feasibility and precision. This constraint is typically not verified by optimal trajectories which might not even be piecewise constants. Our goal is to provide a feasible trajectory that minimizes the number of switchings while maintaining some qualities of the desired trajectory, such as optimality with respect to a given criterion. The one-sided Lipschitz constant is used to derive theoretical estimates. The theory is illustrated on two examples, one is a fully actuated underwater vehicle capable of motion in six degrees-of-freedom and one is minimally actuated with control motions constrained to the vertical plane.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/53801/

Publicador

IEEE

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/53801/1/auv-ACC.pdf

Chyba, Monique, Grammatico, Sergio, Huynh, Van T., Marriott, John, Piccoli, Benedetto, & Smith, Ryan N. (2013) Reducing actuator switchings for motion control of autonomous underwater vehicles. In Proceedings of the American Control Conference (ACC 2013), IEEE, Renaissance Washington, DC Downtown Hotel, Washington, D.C., pp. 1406-1411.

ONR/N62909-11-1-4046

Direitos

© 2013 AACC American Automatic Control Council.

Fonte

School of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #010204 Dynamical Systems in Applications #080101 Adaptive Agents and Intelligent Robotics #091106 Special Vehicles #actuator switching #optimal control #autonomous underwater vehicles #piece-wise constant strategy
Tipo

Conference Paper