Preprint Article Version 1 Preserved in Portico This version is not peer-reviewed

Chemical Spill Encircling using a Quadrotor and Autonomous Surface Vehicles: a Distributed Cooperative Approach

Version 1 : Received: 4 February 2022 / Approved: 8 February 2022 / Online: 8 February 2022 (14:55:03 CET)

A peer-reviewed article of this Preprint also exists.

Jacinto, M.; Cunha, R.; Pascoal, A. Chemical Spill Encircling Using a Quadrotor and Autonomous Surface Vehicles: A Distributed Cooperative Approach. Sensors 2022, 22, 2178. Jacinto, M.; Cunha, R.; Pascoal, A. Chemical Spill Encircling Using a Quadrotor and Autonomous Surface Vehicles: A Distributed Cooperative Approach. Sensors 2022, 22, 2178.

Abstract

This article addresses the problem of formation control of a quadrotor and one (or more) marine vehicles operating at the surface of the water with the end goal of encircling the boundary of a chemical spill, enabling such vehicles to carry and release chemical dispersants used during ocean cleanup missions to break-up oil molecules. Firstly, the mathematical models of the Medusa class of marine robots and quadrotor aircrafts are introduced, followed by the design of single vehicle motion controllers that allow these vehicles to follow a parameterized path individually using Lyapunov based techniques. At a second stage, a distributed controller using event triggered communications is introduced, enabling the vehicles to perform cooperative path following missions according to a pre-defined geometric formation. In the next step, a real time path planning algorithm is developed that makes use of a camera sensor, installed on-board the quadrotor. This sensor enables the detection in the image of which pixels encode parts of a chemical spill boundary and use them to generate and update in real time a set of smooth B-spline based paths for all the vehicles to follow cooperatively. The performance of the complete system is evaluated by resorting to 3-D simulation software, making it possible to simulate visually a chemical spill. Results from real water trials are also provided for parts of the system, where two Medusa vehicles are required to perform a static lawn-mowing path following mission cooperatively at the surface of the water.

Keywords

Quadrotor control; Autonomous Surface Vehicle control; Cooperative Path Following; Online Path Planning; Chemical Spill Boundary Encircling

Subject

Engineering, Control and Systems Engineering

Comments (1)

Comment 1
Received: 8 February 2022
Commenter:
The commenter has declared there is no conflict of interests.
Comment: Great article. Well proved theory with great applicability!
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