Coordinated multi-robot trajectory tracking control over sampled communication

Enrica Rossi, Marco Tognon, Luca Ballotta*, Ruggero Carli, Juan Cortés, Antonio Franchi, Luca Schenato

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)
104 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

In this paper, we propose an inverse-kinematics controller for a class of multi-robot systems in the scenario of sampled communication. The goal is to make a group of robots perform trajectory tracking in a coordinated way when the sampling time of communications is much larger than the sampling time of low-level controllers, disrupting theoretical convergence guarantees of standard control design in continuous time. Given a desired trajectory in configuration space which is pre-computed offline, the proposed controller receives configuration measurements, possibly via wireless, to re-compute velocity references for the robots, which are tracked by a low-level controller. We propose joint design of a sampled proportional feedback plus a novel continuous-time feedforward that linearizes the dynamics around the reference trajectory: this method is amenable to distributed communication implementation where only one broadcast transmission is needed per sample. Also, we provide closed-form expressions for instability and stability regions and convergence rate in terms of proportional gain k and sampling period T. We test the proposed control strategy via numerical simulations in the scenario of cooperative aerial manipulation of a cable-suspended load using a realistic simulator (Fly-Crane). Finally, we compare our proposed controller with centralized approaches that adapt the feedback gain online through smart heuristics, and show that it achieves comparable performance.

Original languageEnglish
Article number110941
JournalAutomatica
Volume151
Early online date26 Feb 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2023

Keywords

  • Control over sampled communications
  • Distributed control
  • Multi-robot systems
  • Trajectory tracking
  • UAVs
  • 2023 OA procedure

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Coordinated multi-robot trajectory tracking control over sampled communication'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this