Fuzzy-Based Fault-Tolerant Control for Omnidirectional Mobile Robot

The motion-planning problem is well known in robotics; it aims to find a free-obstacle path from a starting point to a destination. To make use of actuation generosity and the fuzzy fast response behavior compared to other non-linear controllers, a fuzzy-based fault-tolerant control for an omnidirec...

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Main Authors: Ahmad M. Alshorman, Omar Alshorman, Muhammad Irfan, Adam Glowacz, Fazal Muhammad, Wahyu Caesarendra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-09-01
Series:Machines
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1702/8/3/55
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spelling doaj-7ff333b0ad0246cbb801c11d40c5fc602020-11-25T03:00:35ZengMDPI AGMachines2075-17022020-09-018555510.3390/machines8030055Fuzzy-Based Fault-Tolerant Control for Omnidirectional Mobile RobotAhmad M. Alshorman0Omar Alshorman1Muhammad Irfan2Adam Glowacz3Fazal Muhammad4Wahyu Caesarendra5Mechanical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering Department, Jordan University of Science and Technology, Irbid 22110, JordanElectrical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Najran University, Najran 61441, Saudi ArabiaCollege of Engineering, Electrical Engineering Department, Najran University, Najran 61441, Saudi ArabiaDepartment of Automatic Control and Robotics, AGH University of Science and Technology, 30-059 Kraków, PolandDepartment of Electrical Engineering, City University of Science and Information Technology Peshawar, Peshawar 25000, PakistanFaculty of Integrated Technologies, Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Jalan Tungku Link, Gadong BE1410, BruneiThe motion-planning problem is well known in robotics; it aims to find a free-obstacle path from a starting point to a destination. To make use of actuation generosity and the fuzzy fast response behavior compared to other non-linear controllers, a fuzzy-based fault-tolerant control for an omnidirectional mobile robot with four Mecanum wheels is proposed. The objective is to provide the robot with an online scheme to control the robot motion while moving toward the final destination with avoiding obstacles in its environment and providing an adaptive solution for a combination of one or combination of the wheel’s faults. The faults happen when the wheel does not receive the control command signal from the controller; in this case, the robot can rotate freely due to the interaction with the ground. The principle of fuzzy-based control proposed by Sugeno is used to develop the motion controller. The motion controller consists of two main controllers: the Run-To-Goal, and the obstacle-avoidance controller. The outputs of these two controllers are superposed to get the net potential force on the robot. By its simplicity, the fuzzy controller can be suitable for online applications (online path planning in our case). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first fuzzy-based fault-tolerant controller for an omnidirectional robot. The proposed controller is tested by a set of simulation scenarios to check the proposed fuzzy tolerant control. Kuka OmniRob is used as an example of the omnidirectional robot in these simulation runs. Matlab is used to build the fuzzy-based fault-tolerant control, and the 3D simulation is developed on the CoppeliaSim software. We examine five distinct scenarios, each one with a different fault state. In all scenarios, the proposed algorithm could control the robot to reach its final destination with the absence and presence of an obstacle in the workspace, despite actuator faults, without crossing the workspace boundaries.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1702/8/3/55mobile robotspath planningfault controlfault identificationartificial potential fie ledfuzzy control
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ahmad M. Alshorman
Omar Alshorman
Muhammad Irfan
Adam Glowacz
Fazal Muhammad
Wahyu Caesarendra
spellingShingle Ahmad M. Alshorman
Omar Alshorman
Muhammad Irfan
Adam Glowacz
Fazal Muhammad
Wahyu Caesarendra
Fuzzy-Based Fault-Tolerant Control for Omnidirectional Mobile Robot
Machines
mobile robots
path planning
fault control
fault identification
artificial potential fie led
fuzzy control
author_facet Ahmad M. Alshorman
Omar Alshorman
Muhammad Irfan
Adam Glowacz
Fazal Muhammad
Wahyu Caesarendra
author_sort Ahmad M. Alshorman
title Fuzzy-Based Fault-Tolerant Control for Omnidirectional Mobile Robot
title_short Fuzzy-Based Fault-Tolerant Control for Omnidirectional Mobile Robot
title_full Fuzzy-Based Fault-Tolerant Control for Omnidirectional Mobile Robot
title_fullStr Fuzzy-Based Fault-Tolerant Control for Omnidirectional Mobile Robot
title_full_unstemmed Fuzzy-Based Fault-Tolerant Control for Omnidirectional Mobile Robot
title_sort fuzzy-based fault-tolerant control for omnidirectional mobile robot
publisher MDPI AG
series Machines
issn 2075-1702
publishDate 2020-09-01
description The motion-planning problem is well known in robotics; it aims to find a free-obstacle path from a starting point to a destination. To make use of actuation generosity and the fuzzy fast response behavior compared to other non-linear controllers, a fuzzy-based fault-tolerant control for an omnidirectional mobile robot with four Mecanum wheels is proposed. The objective is to provide the robot with an online scheme to control the robot motion while moving toward the final destination with avoiding obstacles in its environment and providing an adaptive solution for a combination of one or combination of the wheel’s faults. The faults happen when the wheel does not receive the control command signal from the controller; in this case, the robot can rotate freely due to the interaction with the ground. The principle of fuzzy-based control proposed by Sugeno is used to develop the motion controller. The motion controller consists of two main controllers: the Run-To-Goal, and the obstacle-avoidance controller. The outputs of these two controllers are superposed to get the net potential force on the robot. By its simplicity, the fuzzy controller can be suitable for online applications (online path planning in our case). To the best of our knowledge, this is the first fuzzy-based fault-tolerant controller for an omnidirectional robot. The proposed controller is tested by a set of simulation scenarios to check the proposed fuzzy tolerant control. Kuka OmniRob is used as an example of the omnidirectional robot in these simulation runs. Matlab is used to build the fuzzy-based fault-tolerant control, and the 3D simulation is developed on the CoppeliaSim software. We examine five distinct scenarios, each one with a different fault state. In all scenarios, the proposed algorithm could control the robot to reach its final destination with the absence and presence of an obstacle in the workspace, despite actuator faults, without crossing the workspace boundaries.
topic mobile robots
path planning
fault control
fault identification
artificial potential fie led
fuzzy control
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1702/8/3/55
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