Page 203 - Autonomous Mobile Robots
P. 203

II




                              Modeling and Control












                              For robotic systems that are embodied, situated and mobile, intelligent inter-
                              action with the environment and the successful operation in response to
                              higher-level commands is crucial before such systems can qualify as autonom-
                              ous and intelligent. This implies the ability of each robot to, at least, be capable
                              of controlling the equipped hardware so as to take the action that is required of
                              the robot, which ranges from moving between points, to changing the pose of
                              equipment like robotic grippers and manipulators. Effective control of a robot’s
                              hardware faculties, and making use of sensor feedback, is therefore extremely
                              important.
                                 Due to Brockett’s theorem, it is well known that nonholonomic systems with
                              restricted mobility cannot be stabilized to a desired configuration (or posture)
                              via differentiable, or even continuous, pure-state feedback. Therefore, different
                              approacheshavebeenproposed, whichincludesdiscontinuous, hybrid, andtime
                              varying control laws. Many elegant control strategies have been proposed for
                              various nonholonomic systems. Among them, research results can generally be
                              classified into two classes. The first class is kinematic control, which provides
                              the solutions only on a pure kinematic level, where the systems are represented
                              by their kinematic models and velocity acts as the control input. One commonly
                              used approach for the controller design of nonholonomic systems is to convert,
                              with appropriate state and input transformations, the original systems into some
                              canonical forms for which the design can be carried out more easily. Chapter 5
                              explores the use of discontinuous control laws for the kinematic control of
                              nonholonomic systems. The chapter also presents the design of a hybrid variable

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                              © 2006 by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC



                                 FRANKL: “dk6033_c005” — 2006/3/31 — 16:42 — page 187 — #1
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