Embedded Motion Control 2017 Group 2

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Welcome on the group 2 page.

Weekly meetings are on Friday morning.

Group Members

Name: Report name: Student id:
Matthijs van der Burgh M.F.B. van der Burgh 0771381
Joep Linssen J.M.H.G.H. Linssen 0815502
Sil Schouten S. Schouten 0821521
Daniël Pijnenborg D.H.G. Pijnenborg 0821583
Rens Slenders R. Slenders 1028611
Joeri Roelofs J. Roelofs 1029491
Yanick Douven Y.G.M. Douven Tutor


Minutes

Minutes of team meetings are available here: [1]

Initial design

Introduction

The goal of this project is to autonomously solve a maze with a robot (PICO) as fast as possible. The robot has sensors, actuators and a computer on board to navigate through the maze. The computer runs on Linux 14.04 and the program language used for the software is C++. In this section the initial design is discussed, which consist of the requirements, functions, components, specifications and interfaces. This design will be used to build structured software and define required interfaces.

Requirements

To solve the maze problem the following are required

  • Finding the exit
  • Finding and opening the door
  • Avoiding obstacles at all times
  • The maze should be solved within 5 min
  • All tasks must be executed autonomously
  • The system should work on any maze
  • The robot mustn't get trapped in loops

Functions

The functions which have to be implemented are subdivided into the different contexts. Motion functions describe how the software gets input from and supplies output to PICO. Skill functions describe how different skills are executed in the software. Lastly Task functions implement task scheduling.

The motion functions have been determined as:

  • Basic actuation
    • Give PICO the ability to move around and rotate
  • Getting information
    • Receive information from LRF and odometry sensors.
  • Opening door
    • Make a sound to open door.

The more advanced skill functions are:

  • Mapping
    • Use information from ”Get information” to determine and save a map of the environment. This creates the world model for PICO.
  • Localisation
    • Determine where PICO is located in the map created in ”Mapping”. This will most likely be implemented in the same function.
  • Object avoidance
    • Use current LRF data to make sure PICO does never hit a wall.
  • Maze solving
    • Use the map in combination with current and previous locations within the map to determine a route out of the maze.
  • Door and exit detection
    • Using the map to detect if possible doors have been found and if PICO has finished the maze.

The task control implements switching between the following tasks:

  • Map making
    • Done throughout the challenge to improve current map.
  • Finding doors
    • Done in first stage of the challenge when no door has been found yet
  • Finding the exit
    • Once a door has been found and opened the task is to go through the door and finish the challenge.

Corner detection

Caption text

Files

File:Initial Design.pdf