Avian-Inspired High-Precision Tracking Control for Aerial Manipulators
Aerial manipulators, composed of multirotors and robotic arms, have a structure and function highly reminiscent of avian species. This paper studies the tracking control problem for aerial manipulators. This paper studies the tracking control problem for aerial manipulators. We propose an avian-insp...
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Zusammenfassung: | Aerial manipulators, composed of multirotors and robotic arms, have a
structure and function highly reminiscent of avian species. This paper studies
the tracking control problem for aerial manipulators. This paper studies the
tracking control problem for aerial manipulators. We propose an avian-inspired
aerial manipulation system, which includes an avian-inspired robotic arm
design, a Recursive Newton-Euler (RNE) method-based nonlinear flight
controller, and a coordinated controller with two modes. Compared to existing
methods, our proposed approach offers several attractive features. First, the
morphological characteristics of avian species are used to determine the size
proportion of the multirotor and the robotic arm in the aerial manipulator.
Second, the dynamic coupling of the aerial manipulator is addressed by the
RNE-based flight controller and a dual-mode coordinated controller.
Specifically, under our proposed algorithm, the aerial manipulator can
stabilize the end-effector's pose, similar to avian head stabilization. The
proposed approach is verified through three numerical experiments. The results
show that even when the quadcopter is disturbed by different forces, the
position error of the end-effector achieves millimeter-level accuracy, and the
attitude error remains within 1 degree. The limitation of this work is not
considering aggressive manipulation like that seen in birds. Addressing this
through future studies that explore real-world experiments will be a key
direction for research. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2411.10966 |