Multi-Wheeled Passive Sliding with Fully-Actuated Aerial Robots: Tip-Over Recovery and Avoidance
Hui, Tong, Cuniato, Eugenio, Pantic, Michael, Ghielmini, Jefferson, Lanegger, Christian, Papageorgiou, Dimitrios, Tognon, Marco, Siegwart, Roland, Fumagalli, Matteo
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Push-and-slide tasks carried out by fully-actuated aerial robots can be used for inspection and simple maintenance tasks at height, such as non-destructive testing and painting. Often, an end-effector based on multiple non-actuated contact wheels is used to contact the surface. This approach entails challenges in ensuring consistent wheel contact with a surface whose exact orientation and location might be uncertain due to sensor aliasing and drift. Using a standard full-pose controller dependent on the inaccurate surface position and orientation may cause wheels to lose contact during sliding, and subsequently lead to robot tip-over. To address the tip-over issue, we present two approaches: (1) tip-over avoidance guidelines for hardware design, and (2) control for tip-over recovery and avoidance. Physical experiments with a fully-actuated aerial vehicle were executed for a push-and-slide task on a flat surface. The resulting data is used in deriving tip-over avoidance guidelines and designing a simulator that closely captures real-world conditions. We then use the simulator to test the effectiveness and robustness of the proposed approaches in risky scenarios against uncertainties.
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
May-28-2024
- Country:
- Europe > Switzerland > Zürich > Zürich (0.14)
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.50)
- Industry:
- Aerospace & Defense (0.46)
- Energy (0.67)
- Technology:
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (1.00)