1 Copyright © 2013 by ASME
Proceedings of the ASME 2013 International Design Engineering Technical Conference &
Computers and Information in Engineering Conference
IDETC/CIE 2013
August 4-7, 2013, Portland, Oregon, USA
DETC2013-12401
KINEMATIC MODELING, ANALYSIS AND CONTROL OF HIGHLY
RECONFIGURABLE ARTICULATED WHEELED VEHICLES
ABSTRACT
The Articulated Wheeled Vehicle (AWV) paradigm
examines a class of wheeled vehicles where the chassis is
connected via articulated chains to a set of ground-contact
wheels. Actively- or passively- controlled articulations can help
alter wheel placement with respect to chassis during locomotion,
endowing the vehicle with significant reconfigurability and
redundancy. The ensuing ‘leg-wheeled’ systems exploit these
capabilities to realize significant advantages (improved stability,
obstacle surmounting capability, enhanced robustness) over both
traditional wheeled-and/or legged-systems in a range of uneven-
terrain locomotion applications. In our previous work, we
exploited the reconfiguration capabilities of a planar AWR to
achieve internal shape regulation, secondary to a trajectory-
following task. In this work, we extend these capabilities to the
full 3D case – in order to utilize the full potential of kinematic-
and actuation- redundancy to enhance rough-terrain locomotion.
INTRODUCTION
Articulated Wheeled Vehicles (AWVs) consist of a principal
vehicle-chassis connected to a set of wheels with ground contact
via actively- or passively-articulated chains. The presence of the
so-called ‘articulated leg-wheel’ chain endows reconfigurability,
by allowing relocation of the wheel with respect to the chassis.
The AWV paradigm offers immense possibilities for
enhanced locomotion-performance of autonomous mobile
robots while assuring the reliability of the system. For instance,
the articulated-suspensions permit the vehicle to change the
location of center of mass by adjusting the linkages/joints, so as
to avoid the rollover when passing the uneven terrain [1, 2].
Similarly, the vehicle can reduce its footprint to pass narrow
doorways or expand the wheelbase when stability is required.
The resulting class of Leg-Wheel Vehicles (as the AWVs are also
called) have many potential applications (ranging from planetary
exploration [3, 4], agriculture [5, 6] to military and rescue
operations) due to their advantages over traditional wheeled
systems.
Figure 1: Schematic of Leg-Wheel Vehicles.
In most applications, the wheels of an AWR are considered
to be rigid discs with a single point-of-contact with the terrain.
The wheel velocities are governed by a set of non-holonomic
constraints, which permit rolling along the disk-plane without
allowing lateral side-slip. However, potentially, these velocity-
level constraints can be violated, but results in slipping and
skidding. Minimization of slipping and skidding is usually
desired (both from the perspective of reducing the energy
dissipation and improving measurement uncertainty) and can be
achieved by adding intermediate articulations. Additionally, the
articulations and actuation within the leg-wheel chain, serves to
Aliakbar Alamdari
Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering,
SUNY at Buffalo
Buffalo, NY, 14260
aalamdar@buffalo.edu
Xiaobo Zhou
Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering,
SUNY at Buffalo
Buffalo, NY, 14260
xzhou9@buffalo.edu
Venkat N. Krovi
Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering,
SUNY at Buffalo
Buffalo, NY, 14260
vkrovi@buffalo.edu