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Suction stabilized floats have been implemented into a variety of applications such as supporting wind turbines in off-shore wind farms and for stabilizing cargo ships. This thesis proposes an alternative use for the technology in creating a system of suction stabilized floats equipped with real time location modules to hel

Suction stabilized floats have been implemented into a variety of applications such as supporting wind turbines in off-shore wind farms and for stabilizing cargo ships. This thesis proposes an alternative use for the technology in creating a system of suction stabilized floats equipped with real time location modules to help first responders establish a localized coordinate system to assist in rescues. The floats create a stabilized platform for each anchor module due to the inverse slack tank effect established by the inner water chamber. The design of the float has also been proven to be stable in most cases of amplitudes and frequencies ranging from 0 to 100 except for when the frequency ranges from 23 to 60 Hz for almost all values of the amplitude. The modules in the system form a coordinate grid based off the anchors that can track the location of a tag module within the range of the system using ultra-wideband communications. This method of location identification allows responders to use the system in GPS denied environments. The system can be accessed through an Android app with Bluetooth communications in close ranges or through internet of things (IoT) using a module as a listener, a Raspberry Pi and an internet source. The system has proven to identify the location of the tag in moderate ranges with an approximate accuracy of the tag location being 15 cm.
ContributorsDye, Michaela (Author) / Redkar, Sangram (Thesis advisor) / Sugar, Thomas (Committee member) / Rogers, Bradley (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
Physical and structural tree measurements are applied in forestry, precision agriculture and conservation for various reasons. Since measuring tree properties manually is tedious, measurements from only a small subset of trees present in a forest, agricultural land or survey site are often used. Utilizing robotics to autonomously estimate physical tree

Physical and structural tree measurements are applied in forestry, precision agriculture and conservation for various reasons. Since measuring tree properties manually is tedious, measurements from only a small subset of trees present in a forest, agricultural land or survey site are often used. Utilizing robotics to autonomously estimate physical tree dimensions would speed up the measurement or data collection process and allow for a much larger set of trees to be used in studies. In turn, this would allow studies to make more generalizable inferences about areas with trees. To this end, this thesis focuses on developing a system that generates a semantic representation of the topology of a tree in real-time. The first part describes a simulation environment and a real-world sensor suite to develop and test the tree mapping pipeline proposed in this thesis. The second part presents details of the proposed tree mapping pipeline. Stage one of the mapping pipeline utilizes a deep learning network to detect woody and cylindrical portions of a tree like trunks and branches based on popular semantic segmentation networks. Stage two of the pipeline proposes an algorithm to separate the detected portions of a tree into individual trunk and branch segments. The third stage implements an optimization algorithm to represent each segment parametrically as a cylinder. The fourth stage formulates a multi-sensor factor graph to incrementally integrate and optimize the semantic tree map while also fusing two forms of odometry. Finally, results from all the stages of the tree mapping pipeline using simulation and real-world data are presented. With these implementations, this thesis provides an end-to-end system to estimate tree topology through semantic representations for forestry and precision agriculture applications.
ContributorsVishwanatha, Rakshith (Author) / Das, Jnaneshwar (Thesis advisor) / Martin, Roberta (Committee member) / Throop, Heather (Committee member) / Zhang, Wenlong (Committee member) / Ehsani, Reza (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
There has been a decrease in the fertility rate over the years due to today’s younger generation facing more pressure in the workplace and their personal lives. With an aging population, more and more older people with limited mobility will require nursing care for their daily activities. There are several

There has been a decrease in the fertility rate over the years due to today’s younger generation facing more pressure in the workplace and their personal lives. With an aging population, more and more older people with limited mobility will require nursing care for their daily activities. There are several applications for wearable sensor networks presented in this paper. The study will also present a motion capture system using inertial measurement units (IMUs) and a pressure-sensing insole with a control system for gait assistance using wearable sensors. This presentation will provide details on the implementation and calibration of the pressure-sensitive insole, the IMU-based motion capture system, as well as the hip exoskeleton robot. Furthermore, the estimation of the Ground Reaction Force (GRF) from the insole design and implementation of the motion tracking using quaternion will be discussed in this document.
ContributorsLi, Xunguang (Author) / Redkar, Sangram (Thesis advisor) / Sugar, Thomas (Committee member) / Subramanian, Susheelkumar (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
This work endeavors to lay a solid foundation for the exploration and the considerations of exoskeletons, exosuits, and medical devices concerning proprioceptive feedback. This investigation is situated at the nexus of engineering, neuroscience, and rehabilitation medicine, striving to cultivate a holistic understanding of how mechanical augmentation, interfaced synergistically with human

This work endeavors to lay a solid foundation for the exploration and the considerations of exoskeletons, exosuits, and medical devices concerning proprioceptive feedback. This investigation is situated at the nexus of engineering, neuroscience, and rehabilitation medicine, striving to cultivate a holistic understanding of how mechanical augmentation, interfaced synergistically with human proprioception, can foster enhanced mobility and safety. This is especially pertinent for individuals with compromised motor functions.British Neurologist Oliver Wolf Sacks in 1985 published “The Man who Mistook His Wife for a Hat” a series of his most memorable neurological case describing the brain's strangest pathways. One of these cases is “The Disembodied Lady”, Christina a 27-year-old woman that lost entirely the sense of proprioception due to polyneuropathy. This caused her to not be able to control her body, and she declares that “I feel the wind on my arms and face, and then I know, faintly, I have arms and a face. It’s not the real thing, but it’s something—it lifts this horrible, dead veil for a while. ” Finally, she was able to control her body using vision alone. Dr. Sacks introduced, for the first time, the importance of proprioception, as the sense of position of body parts relative to other parts of the body, to western culture. This document’s mission is to identify unexplored concepts in the literature regarding exoskeletons, wearables and assistive technology and a user’s proprioception, embodiment and utilization when wearing devices. Dr. Philipp Beckerle suggests the need to research the connections between wearable hardware and human sense of proprioception. He also emphasizes the need for functional assessment protocols for wearables devices and the role of embodiment. He criticizes the current commercially available upper-limb prostheses since they only restore limited functions and therefore impede embodiment. This document’s goal is to identify operative solutions through the adaptation of existing technologies and to use effective solutions to improve the quality of life of people suffering from pathologies or traumatic injuries.
ContributorsVignola, Claudio (Author) / Sugar, Thomas (Thesis advisor) / Redkar, Sangram (Committee member) / McDaniels, Troy (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Navigation and mapping in GPS-denied environments, such as coal mines ordilapidated buildings filled with smog or particulate matter, pose a significant challenge due to the limitations of conventional LiDAR or vision systems. Therefore there exists a need for a navigation algorithm and mapping strategy which do not use vision systems but are still

Navigation and mapping in GPS-denied environments, such as coal mines ordilapidated buildings filled with smog or particulate matter, pose a significant challenge due to the limitations of conventional LiDAR or vision systems. Therefore there exists a need for a navigation algorithm and mapping strategy which do not use vision systems but are still able to explore and map the environment. The map can further be used by first responders and cave explorers to access the environments. This thesis presents the design of a collision-resilient Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV), XPLORER that utilizes a novel navigation algorithm for exploration and simultaneous mapping of the environment. The real-time navigation algorithm uses the onboard Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs) and arm bending angles for contact estimation and employs an Explore and Exploit strategy. Additionally, the quadrotor design is discussed, highlighting its improved stability over the previous design. The generated map of the environment can be utilized by autonomous vehicles to navigate the environment. The navigation algorithm is validated in multiple real-time experiments in different scenarios consisting of concave and convex corners and circular objects. Furthermore, the developed mapping framework can serve as an auxiliary input for map generation along with conventional LiDAR or vision-based mapping algorithms. Both the navigation and mapping algorithms are designed to be modular, making them compatible with conventional UAVs also. This research contributes to the development of navigation and mapping techniques for GPS-denied environments, enabling safer and more efficient exploration of challenging territories.
ContributorsPandian Saravanakumaran, Aravind Adhith (Author) / Zhang, Wenlong (Thesis advisor) / Das, Jnaneshwar (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Robotic technology can be broadly categorized into two main approaches based on the compliance of the robot's materials and structure: hard and soft. Hard, traditional robots, with mechanisms to transmit forces, provide high degrees of freedom (DoFs) and precise manipulation, making them commonly used in industry and academic research. The

Robotic technology can be broadly categorized into two main approaches based on the compliance of the robot's materials and structure: hard and soft. Hard, traditional robots, with mechanisms to transmit forces, provide high degrees of freedom (DoFs) and precise manipulation, making them commonly used in industry and academic research. The field of soft robotics, on the other hand, is a new trend from the past three decades of robotics that uses soft materials such as silicone or textiles as the body or material base instead of the rigid bodies used in traditional robots. Soft robots are typically pre-programmed with specific geometries, and perform well at tasks such as human-robot interaction, locomotion in complex environments, and adaptive reconfiguration to the environment, which reduces the cost of future programming and control. However, full soft robotic systems are often less mobile due to their actuation --pneumatics, high-voltage electricity or magnetics -- even if the robot itself is at a millimeter or centimeter scale. Rigid or hard robots, on the other hand, can often carry the weight of their own power, but with a higher burden of cost for control and sensing. A middle ground is thus sought, to combine soft robotics technologies with rigid robots, by implementing mechanism design principles with soft robots to embed functionalities or utilize soft robots as the actuator on a rigid robotic system towards an affordable robotic system design. This dissertation showcases five examples of this design principle with two main research branches: locomotion and wearable robotics. In the first research case, an example of how a miniature swimming robot can navigate through a granular environment using compliant plates is presented, compared to other robots that change their shape or use high DoF mechanisms. In the second pipeline, mechanism design is implemented using soft robotics concepts in a wearable robot. An origami-inspired, soft "exo-shell", that can change its stiffness on demand, is introduced. As a follow-up to this wearable origami-inspired robot, a geometry-based, ``near" self-locking modular brake is then presented. Finally, upon combining the origami-inspired wearable robot and brake design, a concept of a modular wearable robot is showcased for the purpose of answering a series of biomechanics questions.
ContributorsLi, Dongting (Author) / Aukes, Daniel M (Thesis advisor) / Sugar, Thomas G (Committee member) / Zhang, Wenlong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Multibody Dynamic (MBD) models are important tools in motion analysis and are used to represent and accurately predict the behavior of systems in the real-world. These models have a range of applications, including the stowage and deployment of flexible deployables on spacecraft, the dynamic response of vehicles in automotive design

Multibody Dynamic (MBD) models are important tools in motion analysis and are used to represent and accurately predict the behavior of systems in the real-world. These models have a range of applications, including the stowage and deployment of flexible deployables on spacecraft, the dynamic response of vehicles in automotive design and crash testing, and mapping interactions of the human body. An accurate model can aid in the design of a system to ensure the system is effective and meets specified performance criteria when built. A model may have many design parameters, such as geometrical constraints and component mechanical properties, or controller parameters if the system uses an external controller. Varying these parameters and rerunning analyses by hand to find an ideal design can be time consuming for models that take hours or days to run. To reduce the amount of time required to find a set of parameters that produces a desired performance, optimization is necessary. Many papers have discussed methods for optimizing rigid and flexible MBD models, and separately their controllers, using both gradient-based and gradient-free algorithms. However, these optimization methods have not been used to optimize full-scale MBD models and their controllers simultaneously. This thesis presents a method for co-optimizing an MBD model and controller that allows for the flexibility to find model and controller-based solutions for systems with tightly coupled parameters. Specifically, the optimization is performed on a quadrotor drone MBD model undergoing disturbance from a slung load and its position controller to meet specified position error performance criteria. A gradient-free optimization algorithm and multiple objective approach is used due to the many local optima from the tradeoffs between the model and controller parameters. The thesis uses nine different quadrotor cases with three different position error formulations. The results are used to determine the effectiveness of the optimization and the ability to converge on a single optimal design. After reviewing the results, the optimization limitations are discussed as well as the ability to transition the optimization to work with different MBD models and their controllers.
ContributorsGambatese, Marcus (Author) / Zhang, Wenlong (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Inoyama, Daisaku (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
Fine control of standing postural balance is essential for completing various tasks in daily activities, which might be compromised when interacting with dynamically challenging environments (e.g., moving ground). Among various biofeedback to improve postural balance control, vibrotactile feedback has an advantage of providing supplementary information about balance control without disturbing

Fine control of standing postural balance is essential for completing various tasks in daily activities, which might be compromised when interacting with dynamically challenging environments (e.g., moving ground). Among various biofeedback to improve postural balance control, vibrotactile feedback has an advantage of providing supplementary information about balance control without disturbing other core functions (e.g., seeing and hearing). This paper investigated the effectiveness of a waist vibrotactile feedback device to improve postural control during standing balance on a dynamically moving ground simulated by a robotic balance platform. Four vibration motors of the waist device applied vibration feedback in the anterior-posterior and medio-lateral direction based on the 2-dimensional sway angle, measured by an inertia measurement unit. Experimental results with 15 healthy participants demonstrated that the waist vibrotactile feedback is effective in improving postural control, evidenced by improvements in center-of-mass and center-of-pressure stability measures. In addition, this study confirmed the effectiveness of the waist vibrotactile feedback in improving standing balance control even under muscle fatigue induced by lower body exercise. The study further confirmed that the waist feedback is more effective in people with lower baseline balance performance in both normal and fatigue conditions.
ContributorsJo, Kwanghee (Author) / Lee, Hyunglae (Thesis advisor) / Sugar, Thomas (Committee member) / Peterson, Daniel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
Description

Cornhole, traditionally seen as tailgate entertainment, has rapidly risen in popularity since the launching of the American Cornhole League in 2016. However, it lacks robust quality control over large tournaments, since many of the matches are scored and refereed by the players themselves. In the past, there have been issues

Cornhole, traditionally seen as tailgate entertainment, has rapidly risen in popularity since the launching of the American Cornhole League in 2016. However, it lacks robust quality control over large tournaments, since many of the matches are scored and refereed by the players themselves. In the past, there have been issues where entire competition brackets have had to be scrapped and replayed because scores were not handled correctly. The sport is in need of a supplementary scoring solution that can provide quality control and accuracy over large matches where there aren’t enough referees present to score games. Drawing from the ACL regulations as well as personal experience and testimony from ACL Pro players, a list of requirements was generated for a potential automatic scoring system. Then, a market analysis of existing scoring solutions was done, and it found that there are no solutions on the market that can automatically score a cornhole game. Using the problem requirements and previous attempts to solve the scoring problem, a list of concepts was generated and evaluated against each other to determine which scoring system design should be developed. After determining that the chosen concept was the best way to approach the problem, the problem requirements and cornhole rules were further refined into a set of physical assumptions and constraints about the game itself. This informed the choice, structure, and implementation of the algorithms that score the bags. The prototype concept was tested on their own, and areas of improvement were found. Lastly, based on the results of the tests and what was learned from the engineering process, a roadmap was set out for the future development of the automatic scoring system into a full, market-ready product.

ContributorsGillespie, Reagan (Author) / Sugar, Thomas (Thesis director) / Li, Baoxin (Committee member) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor) / Engineering Programs (Contributor) / Dean, W.P. Carey School of Business (Contributor)
Created2023-05
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Description
With the extensive technological progress made in the areas of drives, sensors and processing, exoskeletons and other wearable devices have become more feasible. However, the stringent requirements in regards to size and weight continue to exert a strong influence on the system-wide design of these devices and present many obstacles

With the extensive technological progress made in the areas of drives, sensors and processing, exoskeletons and other wearable devices have become more feasible. However, the stringent requirements in regards to size and weight continue to exert a strong influence on the system-wide design of these devices and present many obstacles to a successful solution. On the other hand, while the area of controls has seen a significant amount of progress, there also remains a large potential for improvements. This dissertation approaches the design and control of wearable devices from a systems perspective and provides a framework to successfully overcome the often-encountered obstacles with optimal solutions. The electronics, drive and control system design for the HeSA hip exoskeleton project and APEx hip exoskeleton project are presented as examples of how this framework is used to design wearable devices. In the area of control algorithms, a real-time implementation of the Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) is presented as an alternative approach to extracting amplitude and frequency information of a time varying signal. In comparison to the peak search method (PSM), the FFT allows extracting basic gait signal information at a faster rate because time windows can be chosen to be less than the fundamental gait frequency. The FFT is implemented on a 16-bit processor and the results show the real-time detection of amplitude and frequency coefficients at an update rate of 50Hz. Finally, a novel neural networks based approach to detecting human gait activities is presented. Existing neural networks often require vast amounts of data along with significant computer resources. Using Neural Ordinary Differential Equations (Neural ODEs) it is possible to distinguish between seven different daily activities using a significantly smaller data set, lower system resources and a time window of only 0.1 seconds.
ContributorsBoehler, Alexander (Author) / Sugar, Thomas (Thesis advisor) / Redkar, Sangram (Committee member) / Hollander, Kevin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021