2024-03-28T13:02:59Zhttps://www.tdx.cat/oai/requestoai:www.tdx.cat:10803/2879752017-09-02T00:22:52Zcom_10803_183col_10803_195
nam a 5i 4500
Consensus control in robot networks and cooperative teleoperation : an operational space approach
[Barcelona] :
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya,
2015
Accés lliure
http://hdl.handle.net/10803/287975
cr |||||||||||
AAMMDDs2015 sp ||||fsm||||0|| 0 eng|c
Aldana López, Carlos Iván,
autor
1 recurs en línia (216 pàgines)
Tesi
Doctorat
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Institut d'Organització i Control de Sistemes Industrials
2015
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. Institut d'Organització i Control de Sistemes Industrials
Tesis i dissertacions electròniques
Basáñez, Luis,
supervisor acadèmic
Nuño Ortega, Emmanuel,
supervisor acadèmic
TDX
An interesting approach in cooperative control is to design distributed control strategies which use only local information so that a multi-agent system achieves specified behaviors. A basic behavior in cooperative control is the consensus. Given a multi-agent system, like a multiple robot network, it is said that the agents reach a consensus if the state of each agent converges to a common state. Examples of cooperative tasks in which consensus algorithms are employed include formation control, flocking theory, rendezvous problems and synchronization.
These cooperative tasks have several possible applications, like: transportation systems (intelligent highways, air-traffic control); military systems (formation flight, surveillance, reconnaissance, cooperative attack and rendezvous) and mobile sensor networks (space-based interferometers, environmental sampling).
The solution to the consensus problems involves the design of control algorithms such that the agents can reach an agreement on their states. There are two main problems that are studied in consensus, the leader-follower consensus and the leaderless consensus. In the leader-follower
consensus problem, there exists a leader that specifies the state for the whole group while in a leaderless consensus problem, there is not a priori reference state.
The main goal of this thesis is the design of operational space controllers that solve the leader-follower and the leaderless consensus problems in networks composed of multiple heterogeneous robots. Furthermore, this document proposes novel operational space control schemes for bilateral teleoperation systems. In both scenarios, different conditions are studied, such as the absence of robot velocity measurements, constant and variable time-delays in the robot's interconnection, and uncertainty in the robot's physical parameters.
Most of the previous consensus control algorithms, only work with the position or orientation but not with both. On the contrary, this dissertation deals with the entire pose of the robots that contains both the position and the orientation. Moreover, in order to render a singularity-free
description of the orientation, the unit-quaternions are employed.
The dissertation provides a rigorous stability analysis of the control algorithms and presents simulations and experiments that validate the effectiveness of the proposed controllers.
p
ES-BaCBU
cat
rda
ES-BaCBU
text
txt
rdacontent
informàtic
c
rdamedia
recurs en línia
cr
rdacarrier