Behavior Based Multi Robot Formations with Active Obstacle Avoidance Based on Switching Control Strategy

2012 ◽  
Vol 433-440 ◽  
pp. 6630-6635 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.M. Kuppan Chetty ◽  
M. Singaperumal ◽  
T. Nagarajan

This paper considers the problem of formation control and obstacle avoidance for a group of non-holonomic mobile robots in a leader referenced model based on reactive switching control strategy. Three important issues related to the multi robot formation namely distributed formation control framework, dynamic role switching algorithm and real time implementations are investigated. The switching control strategy combines together formation planning, navigation and active obstacle avoidance in a layered control framework composed of functional behaviors based on the relative motion states of the robots employed in the group. Dynamic role switching mechanism incorporated in this work to tackles the problem of obstacle avoidance in the follower path. The proposed approach is validated through laboratory experiments using commercially available robot research platforms and the results obtained are discussed.

Robotica ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 332-347 ◽  
Author(s):  
Riccardo Falconi ◽  
Lorenzo Sabattini ◽  
Cristian Secchi ◽  
Cesare Fantuzzi ◽  
Claudio Melchiorri

SUMMARYIn this paper, a consensus-based control strategy is presented to gather formation for a group of differential-wheeled robots. The formation shape and the avoidance of collisions between robots are obtained by exploiting the properties of weighted graphs. Since mobile robots are supposed to move in unknown environments, the presented approach to multi-robot coordination has been extended in order to include obstacle avoidance. The effectiveness of the proposed control strategy has been demonstrated by means of analytical proofs. Moreover, results of simulations and experiments on real robots are provided for validation purposes.


2014 ◽  
Vol 511-512 ◽  
pp. 909-912
Author(s):  
Jian Yuan ◽  
Feng Li Zhang ◽  
Zhong Hai Zhou

Cooperative control of multiple autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) plays an important role on marine scientific investigation and marine development. The formation of multi-AUV can significantly enhance applications on the marine sampling, imaging, surveillance and communications. Compared to the formation control of multi-robot, the formation control of multi-AUV is particularly difficult, especially on controlling attitude and direction of AUV; what is more, the communication method among AUVs is acoustic. When communication distance increases, the communication qualities deteriorate quickly; this mainly makes time-delay, signal attenuation and distortion. Although formation control of multiple AUVs obtains a wide range of attention in recent years, the fruits on formation control problem are less than ones on land multi-robot problems. For example, Fiorelli conducted a collaborative and adaptive sampling research of multi-AUV at the Monterey Bay [; Yu and Ura carried out the cable-based modular fast-moving and obstacle-avoidance experiments, and presented an interconnected multi-AUV system with three-dimension sensors. On the aspect of formation control framework [2-, [ proposed a four-layer cooperative control strategy based on hierarchical structure; [ proposed a hierarchical control framework based on hybrid model. In addition, Yang converted a nonholonomic system to a chain one and designed a controller to implement a leader-follower formation for multiple AUVs in [. The formation control for multiple autonomous underwater vehicles is rather different than the control methods for other vehicles, because the formation control for AUVs is of its characteristics, such as the large-scale distribution in space. The finite-time consensus controller designing based on finite-time control and consensus problem has important theoretical and practical significance. The decentralized controller methods for the autonomous underwater vehicle are applied more and more, but they ignore the coupling relationship between them. Another method is that an AUV is modeling as an agent, but this method ignores attitude characteristics of AUVs (pitch, roll and yaw). In this paper, we consider the cooperative control problem in three dimensional spaces. Finite-time formation for Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (AUVs) with constraints on communication range is investigated. We proposed a two-layer finite-time consensus control law, to avoid leading to collapse on formation because of failure leader, all AUVs are arrayed in the same level and each AUV can obtain global formation information. Finally, the simulation results show the effectiveness of the control strategy.


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