Path planning and path tracking control of unmanned ground vehicles(UGVs)

Author(s):  
Liguo Weng ◽  
D.Y. Song
2018 ◽  
Vol 06 (04) ◽  
pp. 251-266
Author(s):  
Phillip J. Durst ◽  
Christopher T. Goodin ◽  
Cindy L. Bethel ◽  
Derek T. Anderson ◽  
Daniel W. Carruth ◽  
...  

Path planning plays an integral role in mission planning for ground vehicle operations in urban areas. Determining the optimum path through an urban area is a well-understood problem for traditional ground vehicles; however, in the case of autonomous unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs), additional factors must be considered. For an autonomous UGV, perception algorithms rather than platform mobility will be the limiting factor in operational capabilities. For this study, perception was incorporated into the path planning process by associating sensor error costs with traveling through nodes within an urban road network. Three common perception sensors were used for this study: GPS, LIDAR, and IMU. Multiple set aggregation operators were used to blend the sensor error costs into a single cost, and the effects of choice of aggregation operator on the chosen path were observed. To provide a robust path planning ability, a fuzzy route planning algorithm was developed using membership functions and fuzzy rules to allow for qualitative route planning in the case of generalized UGV performance. The fuzzy membership functions were then applied to several paths through the urban area to determine what sensors were optimized in each path to provide a measure of the UGV’s performance capabilities. The research presented in this paper shows the impacts that sensing/perception has on ground vehicle route planning by demonstrating a fuzzy route planning algorithm constructed by using a robust rule set that quantifies these impacts.


Author(s):  
Yimin Chen ◽  
Chuan Hu ◽  
Yechen Qin ◽  
Mingjun Li ◽  
Xiaolin Song

Obstacle avoidance strategy is important to ensure the driving safety of unmanned ground vehicles. In the presence of static and moving obstacles, it is challenging for the unmanned ground vehicles to plan and track the collision-free paths. This paper proposes an obstacle avoidance strategy consists of the path planning and the robust fuzzy output-feedback control. A path planner is formed to generate the collision-free paths that avoid static and moving obstacles. The quintic polynomial curves are employed for path generation considering computational efficiency and ride comfort. Then, a robust fuzzy output-feedback controller is designed to track the planned paths. The Takagi–Sugeno (T–S) fuzzy modeling technique is utilized to handle the system variables when forming the vehicle dynamic model. The robust output-feedback control approach is used to track the planned paths without using the lateral velocity signal. The proposed obstacle avoidance strategy is validated in CarSim® simulations. The simulation results show the unmanned ground vehicle can avoid the static and moving obstacles by applying the designed path planning and robust fuzzy output-feedback control approaches.


IEEE Access ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 1820-1832 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Rzea Jabbarpour ◽  
Houman Zarrabi ◽  
Jason J. Jung ◽  
Pankoo Kim

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (24) ◽  
pp. 9100
Author(s):  
Chenxu Li ◽  
Haobin Jiang ◽  
Shidian Ma ◽  
Shaokang Jiang ◽  
Yue Li

As a key technology for intelligent vehicles, automatic parking is becoming increasingly popular in the area of research. Automatic parking technology is available for safe and quick parking operations without a driver, and improving the driving comfort while greatly reducing the probability of parking accidents. An automatic parking path planning and tracking control method is proposed in this paper to resolve the following issues presented in the existing automatic parking systems, that is, low degree of automation in vehicle control; lack of conformity between segmented path planning and real vehicle motion models; and low success rates of parking due to poor path tracking. To this end, this paper innovatively proposes preview correction which can be applied to parking path planning, and detects the curvature outliers in the parking path through the preview algorithm. In addition, it is also available for correction in advance to optimize the reasonable parking path. Meanwhile, the dual sliding mode variable structure control algorithm is used to formulate path tracking control strategies to improve the path tracking control effect and the vehicle control automation. Based on the above algorithm, an automatic parking system was developed and the real vehicle test was completed, thus exploring a highly intelligent automatic parking technology roadmap. This paper provides two key aspects of system solutions for an automatic parking system, i.e., parking path planning and path tracking control.


2022 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 14
Author(s):  
Bingzhan Zhang ◽  
Zhiyuan Li ◽  
Yaoyao Ni ◽  
Yujie Li

In this paper, we focus on the parking path planning and path tracking control under parallel parking conditions with automatic parking system as the research object. In order to solve the problem of discontinuity of curvature in the path planning of traditional arc-straight combined curve, a quintic polynomial is used to smooth the path. we design a path tracking controller based on the incremental model predictive control (MPC). The preview control based on pure tracking algorithm is used as the comparison algorithm for path tracking. The feasibility of the controller is verified by building a Simulink/CarSim co-simulation platform. In addition, the practicality of the parking controller is further verified by using the ROS intelligent car in the laboratory environment.


2022 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 682
Author(s):  
Yuzhan Wu ◽  
Chenlong Li ◽  
Changshun Yuan ◽  
Meng Li ◽  
Hao Li

Tracking control of Small Unmanned Ground Vehicles (SUGVs) is easily affected by the nonlinearity and time-varying characteristics. An improved predictive control scheme based on the multi-dimensional Taylor network (MTN) is proposed for tracking control of SUGVs. First, a MTN model is used as a predictive model to construct a SUGV model and back propagation (BP) is taken as its learning algorithm. Second, the predictive control law is designed and the traditional objective function is improved to obtain a predictive objective function with a differential term. The optimal control quantity is given in real time through iterative optimization. Meanwhile, the stability of the closed-loop system is proved by the Lyapunov stability theorem. Finally, a tracking control experiment on the SUGV model is used to verify the effectiveness of the proposed scheme. For comparison, traditional MTN and Radial Basis Function (RBF) predictive control schemes are introduced. Moreover, a noise disturbance is considered. Experimental results show that the proposed scheme is effective, which ensures that the vehicle can quickly and accurately track the desired yaw velocity signal with good real-time, robustness, and convergence performance, and is superior to other comparison schemes.


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