This collection includes both ASU Theses and Dissertations, submitted by graduate students, and the Barrett, Honors College theses submitted by undergraduate students. 

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Description
Soft continuum robots with the ability to bend, twist, elongate, and shorten, similar to octopus arms, have many potential applications, such as dexterous manipulation and navigation through unstructured, dynamic environments. Novel soft materials such as smart hydrogels, which change volume and other properties in response to stimuli such as temperature,

Soft continuum robots with the ability to bend, twist, elongate, and shorten, similar to octopus arms, have many potential applications, such as dexterous manipulation and navigation through unstructured, dynamic environments. Novel soft materials such as smart hydrogels, which change volume and other properties in response to stimuli such as temperature, pH, and chemicals, can potentially be used to construct soft robots that achieve self-regulated adaptive reconfiguration through on-demand dynamic control of local properties. However, the design of controllers for soft continuum robots is challenging due to their high-dimensional configuration space and the complexity of modeling soft actuator dynamics. To address these challenges, this dissertation presents two different model-based control approaches for robots with distributed soft actuators and sensors and validates the approaches in simulations and physical experiments. It is demonstrated that by choosing an appropriate dynamical model and designing a decentralized controller based on this model, such robots can be controlled to achieve diverse types of complex configurations. The first approach consists of approximating the dynamics of the system, including its actuators, as a linear state-space model in order to apply optimal robust control techniques such as H∞ state-feedback and H∞ output-feedback methods. These techniques are designed to utilize the decentralized control structure of the robot and its distributed sensing and actuation to achieve vibration control and trajectory tracking. The approach is validated in simulation on an Euler-Bernoulli dynamic model of a hydrogel based cantilevered robotic arm and in experiments with a hydrogel-actuated miniature 2-DOF manipulator. The second approach is developed for soft continuum robots with dynamics that can be modeled using Cosserat rod theory. An inverse dynamics control approach is implemented on the Cosserat model of the robot for tracking configurations that include bending, torsion, shear, and extension deformations. The decentralized controller structure facilitates its implementation on robot arms composed of independently-controllable segments that have local sensing and actuation. This approach is validated on simulated 3D robot arms and on an actual silicone robot arm with distributed pneumatic actuation, for which the inverse dynamics problem is solved in simulation and the computed control outputs are applied to the robot in real-time.
ContributorsDoroudchi, Azadeh (Author) / Berman, Spring (Thesis advisor) / Tsakalis, Konstantinos (Committee member) / Si, Jennie (Committee member) / Marvi, Hamid (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
In the last few decades, with the revolution of availability of low-cost microelectronics, which allow fast and complex computations to be performed on board, there has been increasing attention to aerial vehicles, especially rotary-wing vehicles. This is because of their ability to vertically takeoff and land (VTOL), which make them

In the last few decades, with the revolution of availability of low-cost microelectronics, which allow fast and complex computations to be performed on board, there has been increasing attention to aerial vehicles, especially rotary-wing vehicles. This is because of their ability to vertically takeoff and land (VTOL), which make them appropriate for urban environments where no runways are needed. Quadrotors took considerable attention in research and development due to their symmetric body, which makes them simpler to model and control compared to other configurations.

One contribution of this work is the design of a new open-source based Quadrotor platform for research. This platform is compatible with both HTC Vive Tracking System (HVTS) and OptiTrack Motion Capture System, Robot Operating System (ROS), and MAVLINK communication protocol.

The thesis examined both nonlinear and linear modeling of a 6-DOF rigid-body quadrotor's dynamics along with actuator dynamics. Nonlinear/linear models are used to develop control laws for both low-level and high-level hierarchical control structures. Both HVTS and OptiTrack were used to demonstrate path following for single and multiple quadrotors. Hardware and simulation data are compared. In short, this work establishes a foundation for future work on formation flight of multi-quadrotor.
ContributorsAltawaitan, Abdullah (Author) / Rodriguez, Armando A (Thesis advisor) / Tsakalis, Konstantinos (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
One potential application of multi-robot systems is collective transport, a task in which multiple mobile robots collaboratively transport a payload that is too large or heavy to be carried by a single robot. Numerous control schemes have been proposed for collective transport in environments where robots can localize themselves (e.g.,

One potential application of multi-robot systems is collective transport, a task in which multiple mobile robots collaboratively transport a payload that is too large or heavy to be carried by a single robot. Numerous control schemes have been proposed for collective transport in environments where robots can localize themselves (e.g., using GPS) and communicate with one another, have information about the payload's geometric and dynamical properties, and follow predefined robot and/or payload trajectories. However, these approaches cannot be applied in uncertain environments where robots do not have reliable communication and GPS and lack information about the payload. These conditions characterize a variety of applications, including construction, mining, assembly in space and underwater, search-and-rescue, and disaster response.
Toward this end, this thesis presents decentralized control strategies for collective transport by robots that regulate their actions using only their local sensor measurements and minimal prior information. These strategies can be implemented on robots that have limited or absent localization capabilities, do not explicitly exchange information, and are not assigned predefined trajectories. The controllers are developed for collective transport over planar surfaces, but can be extended to three-dimensional environments.

This thesis addresses the above problem for two control objectives. First, decentralized controllers are proposed for velocity control of collective transport, in which the robots must transport a payload at a constant velocity through an unbounded domain that may contain strictly convex obstacles. The robots are provided only with the target transport velocity, and they do not have global localization or prior information about any obstacles in the environment. Second, decentralized controllers are proposed for position control of collective transport, in which the robots must transport a payload to a target position through a bounded or unbounded domain that may contain convex obstacles. The robots are subject to the same constraints as in the velocity control scenario, except that they are assumed to have global localization. Theoretical guarantees for successful execution of the task are derived using techniques from nonlinear control theory, and it is shown through simulations and physical robot experiments that the transport objectives are achieved with the proposed controllers.
ContributorsFarivarnejad, Hamed (Author) / Berman, Spring (Thesis advisor) / Mignolet, Marc (Committee member) / Tsakalis, Konstantinos (Committee member) / Artemiadis, Panagiotis (Committee member) / Gil, Stephanie (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020