Details
Name
Maria Inês PereiraRole
Research AssistantSince
17th February 2020
Nationality
PortugalCentre
Robotics and Autonomous SystemsContacts
+351220413233
maria.i.pereira@inesctec.pt
2024
Authors
Pereira, MI; Pinto, AM;
Publication
ENGINEERING APPLICATIONS OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Abstract
Autonomous Surface Vehicles (ASVs) are bound to play a fundamental role in the maintenance of offshore wind farms. Robust navigation for inspection vehicles should take into account the operation of docking within a harbouring structure, which is a critical and still unexplored maneuver. This work proposes an end-to-end docking approach for ASVs, based on Reinforcement Learning (RL), which teaches an agent to tackle collision- free navigation towards a target pose that allows the berthing of the vessel. The developed research presents a methodology that introduces the concept of illegal actions to facilitate the vessel's exploration during the learning process. This method improves the adopted Actor-Critic (AC) framework by accelerating the agent's optimization by approximately 38.02%. A set of comprehensive experiments demonstrate the accuracy and robustness of the presented method in scenarios with simulated environmental constraints (Beaufort Scale and Douglas Sea Scale), and a diversity of docking structures. Validation with two different real ASVs in both controlled and real environments demonstrates the ability of this method to enable safe docking maneuvers without prior knowledge of the scenario.
2024
Authors
Pereira, MI; Moreira, C;
Publication
2024 IEEE 22ND MEDITERRANEAN ELECTROTECHNICAL CONFERENCE, MELECON 2024
Abstract
The progressive replacement of thermal power plants by converter-interfaced generation, such as wind and solar power plants, reduces the synchronous component available in the system. Additionally, as converter-interfaced renewable energy sources do not directly provide inertia to the power grid, electric power systems are facing a notorious inertia reduction. When facing disturbances affecting the balance between the generation and demand, reduced inertia systems exhibit higher and faster frequency deviations and dynamics. This can result in the disconnection of generation units as well as load shedding, provoking cascading effects that can compel severe power outages. This work examines the impacts of the progressive integration of converter-interfaced renewable energy sources in the frequency stability, considering critical disturbances involving short-circuits in different locations. To simulate the dynamic behaviour of a network containing high shares of renewable energy generation, the IEEE 39-bus system is used while resorting to the PSS/E simulation package. After obtaining a scenario with reduced synchronous generation, the network's stability is assessed in face of key frequency indicators (frequency nadir and Rate of Change of Frequency, RoCoF). Regarding the critical disturbances applied in a low inertia scenario, different control solutions for the mitigation of frequency stability problems are tested and their performance is assessed comparatively. This involves the investigation of the performance of the active power-frequency control in the renewable energy sources, of synchronous condensers, or fast active power-frequency regulation services from stationary energy storage. Moreover, the influence of the location and apparent power of synchronous condensers (SCs) and Battery Energy Storage Systems (BESS) on the frequency indicators is evaluated.
2023
Authors
Claro, RM; Pereira, MI; Neves, FS; Pinto, AM;
Publication
IEEE ACCESS
Abstract
The use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) in different inspection tasks is increasing. This technology reduces inspection costs and collects high quality data of distinct structures, including areas that are not easily accessible by human operators. However, the reduced energy available on the UAVs limits their flight endurance. To increase the autonomy of a single flight, it is important to optimize the path to be performed by the UAV, in terms of energy loss. Therefore, this work presents a novel formulation of the Travelling Salesman Problem (TSP) and a path planning algorithm that uses a UAV energy model to solve this optimization problem. The novel TSP formulation is defined as Asymmetric Travelling Salesman Problem with Precedence Loss (ATSP-PL), where the cost of moving the UAV depends on the previous position. The energy model relates each UAV movement with its energy consumption, while the path planning algorithm is focused on minimizing the energy loss of the UAV, ensuring that the structure is fully covered. The developed algorithm was tested in both simulated and real scenarios. The simulated experiments were performed with realistic models of wind turbines and a UAV, whereas the real experiments were performed with a real UAV and an illumination tower. The inspection paths generated presented improvements over 24% and 8%, when compared with other methods, for the simulated and real experiments, respectively, optimizing the energy consumption of the UAV.
2023
Authors
Pinto, AM; Marques, JVA; Abreu, N; Campos, DF; Pereira, MI; Gonçalves, E; Campos, HJ; Pereira, P; Neves, F; Matos, A; Govindaraj, S; Durand, L;
Publication
OCEANS 2023 - LIMERICK
Abstract
The demonstration of robotic technologies in real environments is essential for technology developers and end-users to fully showcase the benefits of theirs solutions, and contributes to the promotion of the transition of inspection and maintenance methodologies towards automated robotic strategies. However, before allowing technologies to be demonstrated in real, operating offshore wind-farms, there is a need to de-risk the technology, to ensure its safe operation offshore. As part of the ATLANTIS project, a pioneer pilot infrastructure, the ATLANTIS Test Centre, was installed in Viana do Castelo, Portugal. This infrastructure will allow the demonstration of key enabling robotic technologies for offshore inspection and maintenance. The Test Centre is composed of two distinct testbeds, and a supervisory control centre, enabling the de-risking, testing, validation and demonstration of technologies, in both near-real and real environments. This paper presents the details of the Coastal Testbed of the ATLANTIS Test Centre, from implementation to available resources and infrastructures and environment details.
2022
Authors
Duarte, DF; Pereira, MI; Pinto, AM;
Publication
MARINE TECHNOLOGY SOCIETY JOURNAL
Abstract
Recently, research concerning the navigation of autonomous surface vehicles (ASVs) has been increasing. However, a large-scale implementation of these vessels is still held back by several challenges such as multi-object tracking. Attaining accurate object detection plays a big role in achieving successful tracking. This article presents the development of a detection model with an image-based Con-volutional Neural Network trained through transfer learning, a deep learning tech-nique. To train, test, and validate the detector module, data were collected with the SENSE ASV by sailing through two nearby ports, Leixoes and Viana do Castelo, and recording video frames through its on-board cameras, along with a Light De-tection And Ranging, GPS, and Inertial Measurement Unit data. Images were ex-tracted from the collected data, composing a manually annotated dataset with nine classes of different vessels, along with data from other open-source maritime datasets. The developed model achieved a class mAP@[.5 .95] (mean average precision) of 89.5% and a clear improvement in boat detection compared to a multi-purposed state-of-the-art detector, YOLO-v4, with a 22.9% and 44.3% increase in the mAP with an Intersection over Union threshold of 50% and the mAP@[.5 .95], respectively. It was integrated in a detection and tracking system, being able to continuously detect nearby vessels and provide sufficient informa-tion for simple navigation tasks.
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