luggage trolley
HPPS: A Hierarchical Progressive Perception System for Luggage Trolley Detection and Localization at Airports
Sun, Zhirui, Zhang, Zhe, Zhao, Jieting, Ye, Hanjing, Wang, Jiankun
The robotic autonomous luggage trolley collection system employs robots to gather and transport scattered luggage trolleys at airports. However, existing methods for detecting and locating these luggage trolleys often fail when they are not fully visible. To address this, we introduce the Hierarchical Progressive Perception System (HPPS), which enhances the detection and localization of luggage trolleys under partial occlusion. The HPPS processes the luggage trolley's position and orientation separately, which requires only RGB images for labeling and training, eliminating the need for 3D coordinates and alignment. The HPPS can accurately determine the position of the luggage trolley with just one well-detected keypoint and estimate the luggage trolley's orientation when it is partially occluded. Once the luggage trolley's initial pose is detected, HPPS updates this information continuously to refine its accuracy until the robot begins grasping. The experiments on detection and localization demonstrate that HPPS is more reliable under partial occlusion compared to existing methods. Its effectiveness and robustness have also been confirmed through practical tests in actual luggage trolley collection tasks. A website about this work is available at HPPS.
Autonomous Multiple-Trolley Collection System with Nonholonomic Robots: Design, Control, and Implementation
Xie, Peijia, Xia, Bingyi, Hu, Anjun, Zhao, Ziqi, Meng, Lingxiao, Sun, Zhirui, Gao, Xuheng, Wang, Jiankun, Meng, Max Q. -H.
The intricate and multi-stage task in dynamic public spaces like luggage trolley collection in airports presents both a promising opportunity and an ongoing challenge for automated service robots. Previous research has primarily focused on handling a single trolley or individual functional components, creating a gap in providing cost-effective and efficient solutions for practical scenarios. In this paper, we propose a mobile manipulation robot incorporated with an autonomy framework for the collection and transportation of multiple trolleys that can significantly enhance operational efficiency. We address the key challenges in the trolley collection problem through the novel design of the mechanical system and the vision-based control strategy. We design a lightweight manipulator and docking mechanism, optimized for the sequential stacking and transportation of multiple trolleys. Additionally, based on the Control Lyapunov Function and Control Barrier Function, we propose a novel vision-based control with the online Quadratic Programming which significantly improves the accuracy and efficiency of the collection process. The practical application of our system is demonstrated in real world scenarios, where it successfully executes multiple-trolley collection tasks.
Collaborative Trolley Transportation System with Autonomous Nonholonomic Robots
Xia, Bingyi, Luan, Hao, Zhao, Ziqi, Gao, Xuheng, Xie, Peijia, Xiao, Anxing, Wang, Jiankun, Meng, Max Q. -H.
Abstract-- Cooperative object transportation using multiple robots has been intensively studied in the control and robotics literature, but most approaches are either only applicable to omnidirectional robots or lack a complete navigation and decision-making framework that operates in real time. This paper presents an autonomous nonholonomic multi-robot system and an end-to-end hierarchical autonomy framework for collaborative luggage trolley transportation. This framework finds kinematic-feasible paths, computes online motion plans, and provides feedback that enables the multi-robot system to handle long lines of luggage trolleys and navigate obstacles and pedestrians while dealing with multiple inherently complex and coupled constraints. Robots are versatile tools for object manipulation and In this paper, we present a practical multi-robot system transportation [1], and have a broad range of applications, along with a hierarchical navigation framework for the task including industry assembly lines [2], vehicle extraction [3], of transporting a series of luggage trolleys with autonomous and luggage collection at airports [4], [5], etc. Two nonholonomic robots that were previously used the movement of large objects requires the coordination of in our trolley collection work [5] are further adapted and multiple robots for enhanced strength or mobility.
A Systematic Evaluation of Different Indoor Localization Methods in Robotic Autonomous Luggage Trolley Collection at Airports
Sun, Zhirui, Chen, Weinan, Wang, Jiankun, Meng, Max Q. -H.
This article addresses the localization problem in robotic autonomous luggage trolley collection at airports and provides a systematic evaluation of different methods to solve it. The robotic autonomous luggage trolley collection is a complex system that involves object detection, localization, motion planning and control, manipulation, etc. Among these components, effective localization is essential for the robot to employ subsequent motion planning and end-effector manipulation because it can provide a correct goal position. In this article, we survey four popular and representative localization methods to achieve object localization in the luggage collection process, including radio frequency identification (RFID), Keypoints, ultrawideband (UWB), and Reflectors. To test their performance, we construct a qualitative evaluation framework with Localization Accuracy, Mobile Power Supplies, Coverage Area, Cost, and Scalability. Besides, we conduct a series of quantitative experiments regarding Localization Accuracy and Success Rate on a real-world robotic autonomous luggage trolley collection system. We further analyze the performance of different localization methods based on experiment results, revealing that the Keypoints method is most suitable for indoor environments to achieve the luggage trolley collection.
'Calm' robot to guide passengers to their gates at busy airport
For travellers in a hurry, navigating their way through the terminals at a busy airport can be a stressful experience. At one European airport, however, there will soon be help for those racing to reach their flight in time from a friendly robot called Spencer. Designed with a calm, 'unstirring' face, the robot will trundle around Schiphol Airport in Amsterdam to guide passengers from one gate to another. Spencer the robot (pictured) is due to be tested in Schiphol airport to help guide passengers to the correct gate. Spencer, which stands for'Social situation-aware perception and action for cognitive robots', will build up detailed maps of the airport to help it find its way while avoiding walls and other obstacles.