2023
Autores
Carneiro, JF; Pinto, JB; de Almeida, FG; Cruz, NA;
Publicação
ACTUATORS
Abstract
There are several compelling reasons for exploring the ocean, for instance, the potential for accessing valuable resources, such as energy and minerals; establishing sovereignty; and addressing environmental issues. As a result, the scientific community has increasingly focused on the use of autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) for ocean exploration. Recent research has demonstrated that buoyancy change modules can greatly enhance the energy efficiency of these vehicles. However, the literature is scarce regarding the dynamic models of the vertical motion of buoyancy change modules. It is therefore difficult to develop adequate depth controllers, as this is a very complex task to perform in situ. The focus of this paper is to develop simplified linear models for a buoyancy change module that was previously designed by the authors. These models are experimentally identified and used to fine-tune depth controllers. Experimental results demonstrate that the controllers perform well, achieving a virtual zero steady-state error with satisfactory dynamic characteristics.
2023
Autores
Goncalves, CF; Cruz, NA; Ferreira, BM;
Publicação
2023 IEEE UNDERWATER TECHNOLOGY, UT
Abstract
This paper describes a robotic system to detect and estimate the volume of sediments in underwater wall corners, in scenarios with zero visibility. All detection and positioning is based on data from a scanning sonar. The main idea is to scan the walls and the bottom of the structure to detect the corner, and then use data obtained in the direction of the corner to estimate the presence of sediment accumulation and its volume. Our approach implements an image segmentation to extract range from the surfaces of interest. The resulting data is then employed for relative localization and estimate of the sediment accumulation. The paper provides information about the methodologies developed and data from practical experiments.
2023
Autores
Ferreira, BM; Graça, PA; Alves, JC; Cruz, NA;
Publicação
IEEE JOURNAL OF OCEANIC ENGINEERING
Abstract
This article addresses the 3-D localization of a stand-alone acoustic beacon based on the Principle of Synthetic Baseline using a single receiver on board a surface vehicle. The process only uses the passive reception of an acoustic signal with no explicit synchronization, interaction, or communication with the acoustic beacon. The localization process exploits the transmission of periodic signals without synchronization to a known time reference to estimate the time-of-arrival (ToA) with respect to an absolute time basis provided by the global navigation satellite system (GNSS). We present the development of the acoustic signal acquisition system, the signal processing algorithms, the data processing of times-of-arrival, and an estimator that uses times-of-arrival and the coordinates where they have been collected to obtain the 3-D position of the acoustic beacon. The proposed approach was validated in a real field application on a search for an underwater glider lost in September 2021 near the Portuguese coast.
1996
Autores
Sousa, JB; Pereira, FL; daSilva, EP; Martins, A; Matos, A; Almeida, J; Cruz, N; Tunes, R; Cunha, S;
Publicação
1996 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ROBOTICS AND AUTOMATION, PROCEEDINGS, VOLS 1-4
Abstract
In this article, we describe the analysis, design and implementation of a control architecture for a mobile platform to autonomously carry out transportation, surveillance and inspection tasks in semi-structured industrial environments. Based on a hierarchical structure composed by the Organization, Coordination and Functional levels organized linguistically and structured according to the Principle of Increasing Precision with Decreasing Intelligence, this control architecture is permits the real-time parallel execution of tasks.
2011
Autores
Ferreira, B; Matos, A; Cruz, N;
Publicação
Challenges and Paradigms in Applied Robust Control
Abstract
2004
Autores
Matos, A; Cruz, N;
Publicação
IFAC Proceedings Volumes (IFAC-PapersOnline)
Abstract
In this paper we describe the algorithms used in the external tracking system of the Isurus AUV. By listening to the acoustic signals exchanged between the vehicle and the beacons of the acoustic navigation network, the tracking system is able to obtain distance measurements from the vehicle to each beacon, that are then used to compute the vehicle horizontal position. Several error sources make these measurements inadequate to be used for computing the vehicle position by a simple triangulation technique. The tracking algorithms described here are able to reject highly erroneous measurements, producing position estimates with a satisfactory degree of accuracy. Copyright © 2004 IFAC
The access to the final selection minute is only available to applicants.
Please check the confirmation e-mail of your application to obtain the access code.