2 resultados para Environmental hazards
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
En esta tesis se presenta el desarrollo de un esquema de cooperación entre vehículos terrestres (UGV) y aéreos (UAV) no tripulados, que sirve de base para conformar dos flotas de robots autónomos (denominadas FRACTAL y RoMA). Con el fin de comprobar, en diferentes escenarios y con diferente tareas, la validez de las estrategias de coordinación y cooperación propuestas en la tesis se utilizan los robots de la flota FRACTAL, que sirven como plataforma de prueba para tareas como el uso de vehículos aéreos y terrestres para apoyar labores de búsqueda y rescate en zonas de emergencia y la cooperación de una flota de robots para labores agrícolas. Se demuestra además, que el uso de la técnica de control no lineal conocida como Control por Modos Deslizantes puede ser aplicada no solo para conseguir la navegación autónoma individual de un robot aéreo o terrestre, sino también en tareas que requieren la navegación coordinada y sin colisiones de varios robots en un ambiente compartido. Para esto, se conceptualiza teóricamente el uso de la técnica de Control por Modos Deslizantes como estrategia de coordinación entre robots, extendiendo su aplicación a robots no-holonómicos en R2 y a robots aéreos en el espacio tridimensional. Después de dicha contextualización teórica, se analizan las condiciones necesarias para determinar la estabilidad del sistema multi-robot controlado y, finalmente, se comprueban las características de estabilidad y robustez ofrecidas por esta técnica de control. Tales comprobaciones se hacen simulando la navegación segura y eficiente de un grupo de UGVs para la detección de posibles riesgos ambientales, aprovechando la información aportada por un UAV. Para estas simulaciones se utilizan los modelos matemáticos de robots de la flota RoMA. Estas tareas coordinadas entre los robots se hacen posibles gracias a la efectividad, estabilidad y robustez de las estrategias de control que se desarrollan como núcleo fundamental de este trabajo de investigación. ABSTRACT This thesis presents the development of a cooperation scheme between unmanned ground (UGV) and aerial (UAV) vehicles. This scheme is the basis for forming two fleets of autonomous robots (called FRACTAL and RoMA). In order to assess, in different settings and on different tasks, the validity of the coordination and cooperation strategies proposed in the thesis, the FRACTAL fleet robots serves as a test bed for tasks like using coordinated aerial and ground vehicles to support search and rescue work in emergency scenarios or cooperation of a fleet of robots for agriculture. It is also shown that using the technique of nonlinear control known as Sliding Modes Control (SMC) can be applied not only for individual autonomous navigation of an aircraft or land robot, but also in tasks requiring the coordinated navigation of several robots, without collisions, in a shared environment. To this purpose, a strategy of coordination between robots using Sliding Mode Control technique is theoretically conceptualized, extending its application to non-holonomic robots in R2 and aerial robots in three-dimensional space. After this theoretical contextualization, the stability conditions of multi-robot system are analyzed, and finally, the stability and robustness characteristics are validated. Such validations are made with simulated experiments about the safe and efficient navigation of a group of UGV for the detection of possible environmental hazards, taking advantage of the information provided by a UAV. This simulations are made using mathematical models of RoMA fleet robots. These coordinated tasks of robots fleet are made possible thanks to the effectiveness, stability and robustness of the control strategies developed as core of this research.
Resumo:
The Universidad Politécnica of Madrid (UPM) includes schools and faculties that were for engineering degrees, architecture and computer science, that are now in a quick EEES Bolonia Plan metamorphosis getting into degrees, masters and doctorate structures. They are focused towards action in machines, constructions, enterprises, that are subjected to machines, human and environment created risks. These are present in actions such as use loads, wind, snow, waves, flows, earthquakes, forces and effects in machines, vehicles behavior, chemical effects, and other environmental factors including effects of crops, cattle and beasts, forests, and varied essential economic and social disturbances. Emphasis is for authors in this session more about risks of natural origin, such as for hail, winds, snow or waves that are not exactly known a priori, but that are often considered with statistical expected distributions giving extreme values for convenient return periods. These distributions are known from measures in time, statistic of extremes and models about hazard scenarios and about responses of man made constructions or devices. In each engineering field theories were built about hazards scenarios and how to cover for important risks. Engineers must get that the systems they handle, such as vehicles, machines, firms or agro lands or forests, obtain production with enough safety for persons and with decent economic results in spite of risks. For that risks must be considered in planning, in realization and in operation, and safety margins must be taken but at a reasonable cost. That is a small level of risks will often remain, due to limitations in costs or because of due to strange hazards, and maybe they will be covered by insurance in cases such as in transport with cars, ships or aircrafts, in agro for hail, or for fire in houses or in forests. These and other decisions about quality, security for men or about business financial risks are sometimes considered with Decision Theories models, using often tools from Statistics or operational Research. The authors have done and are following field surveys about risk consideration in the careers in UPM, making deep analysis of curricula taking into account the new structures of degrees in the EEES Bolonia Plan, and they have considered the risk structures offered by diverse schools of Decision theories. That gives an aspect of the needs and uses, and recommendations about improving in the teaching about risk, that may include special subjects especially oriented for each career, school or faculty, so as to be recommended to be included into the curricula, including an elaboration and presentation format using a multi-criteria decision model.