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Design, Deployment, Navigation, and Control of Mobile Robots for Perception and Sensor Data Collection

Abstract

Aerial robots, including rotary-wing and fixed-wing unmanned aerial vehicles or UAVs, have shown great capabilities in surveying as well as search and rescue from above. However, either rotary-wing or fixed-wing UAVs have nearly insoluble flaws. In order to overcome the under-actuating nature of multi-rotor UAVs, Chapter 2 proposes modeling methods and control schemes for fully-actuated hexacopters. Additionally, rotary-wing robots suffer from limited battery life as well as lack of fail-safe mechanism upon losing motors, while fixed-wing robots lacks the ability to take off and land vertically. Therefore, Chapter 4 proposes a bio-inpired hybrid aerial robot to extend mutli-rotor flight time and fail-safe capability and provide fixed-wing glider with vertical take-off and landing or VTOL capability. Moreover, to extend the flight time and optimize the energy consumption of multi-rotor UAVs, Chapter 3 proposes a multi-disciplinary design optimization based flight trajectory optimizer involving linear rotor inflow models to reduce flight time or energy consumption of specific missions.

In terms of unmanned ground vehicles or UGVs used for perception and mapping, there has been a research gap to provide a low-cost, highly agile over-actuated chassis design. Chapter 5 proposes a 3D-printable double Ackermann steering chassis design with 2-wheel standing and balancing capability to fill in this gap. Chapter 6, on the other hand, proposes the system design of a UGV capable of performing perception and mapping in a limited lighting, unstructured, and GPS-denied environment based on a nevertheless nonholonomic chassis, where primary concern becomes the reliability in performing real-time mapping and preservation of solely static environment.

The last but not least topic discussed in this dissertation is to promote the role of UAV imagery in earthquake response. In Chapter 7 we combine the traditional UAV plan view perspective with north and east elevation view video data to provide motion estimation in all 6 degrees of freedom, as well as proposing Video Transformer for motion tracking.

All in all, with attempts to expand and promote the designs, deployment and control schemes of both aerial and ground mobile robots, this dissertation strives to provide case study results and state-of-the-art methods for future robotics studies.

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