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Description
In nearly all commercially successful internal combustion engine applications, the slider crank mechanism is used to convert the reciprocating motion of the piston into rotary motion. The hypocycloid mechanism, wherein the crankshaft is replaced with a novel gearing arrangement, is a viable alternative to the slider crank mechanism. The geared

In nearly all commercially successful internal combustion engine applications, the slider crank mechanism is used to convert the reciprocating motion of the piston into rotary motion. The hypocycloid mechanism, wherein the crankshaft is replaced with a novel gearing arrangement, is a viable alternative to the slider crank mechanism. The geared hypocycloid mechanism allows for linear motion of the connecting rod and provides a method for perfect balance with any number of cylinders including single cylinder applications. A variety of hypocycloid engine designs and research efforts have been undertaken and produced successful running prototypes. Wiseman Technologies, Inc provided one of these prototypes to this research effort. This two-cycle 30cc half crank hypocycloid engine has shown promise in several performance categories including balance and efficiency. To further investigate its potential a more thorough and scientific analysis was necessary and completed in this research effort. The major objective of the research effort was to critically evaluate and optimize the Wiseman prototype for maximum performance in balance, efficiency, and power output. A nearly identical slider crank engine was used extensively to establish baseline performance data and make comparisons. Specialized equipment and methods were designed and built to collect experimental data on both engines. Simulation and mathematical models validated by experimental data collection were used to better quantify performance improvements. Modifications to the Wiseman prototype engine improved balance by 20 to 50% (depending on direction) and increased peak power output by 24%.
ContributorsConner, Thomas (Author) / Redkar, Sangram (Thesis advisor) / Rogers, Bradley (Committee member) / Georgeou, Trian (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2011
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Description
The objective of this work is to develop a Stop-Rotor Multimode UAV. This UAV is capable of vertical take-off and landing like a helicopter and can convert from a helicopter mode to an airplane mode in mid-flight. Thus, this UAV can hover as a helicopter and achieve high mission range

The objective of this work is to develop a Stop-Rotor Multimode UAV. This UAV is capable of vertical take-off and landing like a helicopter and can convert from a helicopter mode to an airplane mode in mid-flight. Thus, this UAV can hover as a helicopter and achieve high mission range of an airplane. The stop-rotor concept implies that in mid-flight the lift generating helicopter rotor stops and rotates the blades into airplane wings. The thrust in airplane mode is then provided by a pusher propeller. The aircraft configuration presents unique challenges in flight dynamics, modeling and control. In this thesis a mathematical model along with the design and simulations of a hover control will be presented. In addition, the discussion of the performance in fixed-wing flight, and the autopilot architecture of the UAV will be presented. Also presented, are some experimental "conversion" results where the Stop-Rotor aircraft was dropped from a hot air balloon and performed a successful conversion from helicopter to airplane mode.
ContributorsVargas-Clara, Alvaro (Author) / Redkar, Sangram (Thesis advisor) / Macia, Narciso (Committee member) / Rajadas, John (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2011
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Description
The objective of this thesis was to compare various approaches for classification of the `good' and `bad' parts via non-destructive resonance testing methods by collecting and analyzing experimental data in the frequency and time domains. A Laser Scanning Vibrometer was employed to measure vibrations samples in order to determine the

The objective of this thesis was to compare various approaches for classification of the `good' and `bad' parts via non-destructive resonance testing methods by collecting and analyzing experimental data in the frequency and time domains. A Laser Scanning Vibrometer was employed to measure vibrations samples in order to determine the spectral characteristics such as natural frequencies and amplitudes. Statistical pattern recognition tools such as Hilbert Huang, Fisher's Discriminant, and Neural Network were used to identify and classify the unknown samples whether they are defective or not. In this work, a Finite Element Analysis software packages (ANSYS 13.0 and NASTRAN NX8.0) was used to obtain estimates of resonance frequencies in `good' and `bad' samples. Furthermore, a system identification approach was used to generate Auto-Regressive-Moving Average with exogenous component, Box-Jenkins, and Output Error models from experimental data that can be used for classification
ContributorsJameel, Osama (Author) / Redkar, Sangram (Thesis advisor) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
In this work, we focused on the stability and reducibility of quasi-periodic systems. We examined the quasi-periodic linear Mathieu equation of the form x ̈+(ä+ϵ[cost+cosùt])x=0 The stability of solutions of Mathieu's equation as a function of parameter values (ä,ϵ) had been analyzed in this work. We used the Floquet type

In this work, we focused on the stability and reducibility of quasi-periodic systems. We examined the quasi-periodic linear Mathieu equation of the form x ̈+(ä+ϵ[cost+cosùt])x=0 The stability of solutions of Mathieu's equation as a function of parameter values (ä,ϵ) had been analyzed in this work. We used the Floquet type theory to generate stability diagrams which were used to determine the bounded regions of stability in the ä-ù plane for fixed ϵ. In the case of reducibility, we first applied the Lyapunov- Floquet (LF) transformation and modal transformation, which converted the linear part of the system into the Jordan form. Very importantly, quasi-periodic near-identity transformation was applied to reduce the system equations to a constant coefficient system by solving homological equations via harmonic balance. In this process we obtained the reducibility/resonance conditions that needed to be satisfied to convert a quasi-periodic system to a constant one.
ContributorsEzekiel, Evi (Author) / Redkar, Sangram (Thesis advisor) / Meitz, Robert (Committee member) / Nam, Changho (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
With the substantial development of intelligent robots, human-robot interaction (HRI) has become ubiquitous in applications such as collaborative manufacturing, surgical robotic operations, and autonomous driving. In all these applications, a human behavior model, which can provide predictions of human actions, is a helpful reference that helps robots to achieve intelligent

With the substantial development of intelligent robots, human-robot interaction (HRI) has become ubiquitous in applications such as collaborative manufacturing, surgical robotic operations, and autonomous driving. In all these applications, a human behavior model, which can provide predictions of human actions, is a helpful reference that helps robots to achieve intelligent interaction with humans. The requirement elicits an essential problem of how to properly model human behavior, especially when individuals are interacting or cooperating with each other. The major objective of this thesis is to utilize the human intention decoding method to help robots enhance their performance while interacting with humans. Preliminary work on integrating human intention estimation with an HRI scenario is shown to demonstrate the benefit. In order to achieve this goal, the research topic is divided into three phases. First, a novel method of an online measure of the human's reliance on the robot, which can be estimated through the intention decoding process from human actions,is described. An experiment that requires human participants to complete an object-moving task with a robot manipulator was conducted under different conditions of distractions. A relationship is discovered between human intention and trust while participants performed a familiar task with no distraction. This finding suggests a relationship between the psychological construct of trust and joint physical coordination, which bridges the human's action to its mental states. Then, a novel human collaborative dynamic model is introduced based on game theory and bounded rationality, which is a novel method to describe human dyadic behavior with the aforementioned theories. The mutual intention decoding process was also considered to inform this model. Through this model, the connection between the mental states of the individuals to their cooperative actions is indicated. A haptic interface is developed with a virtual environment and the experiments are conducted with 30 human subjects. The result suggests the existence of mutual intention decoding during the human dyadic cooperative behaviors. Last, the empirical results show that allowing agents to have empathy in inference, which lets the agents understand that others might have a false understanding of their intentions, can help to achieve correct intention inference. It has been verified that knowledge about vehicle dynamics was also important to correctly infer intentions. A new courteous policy is proposed that bounded the courteous motion using its inferred set of equilibrium motions. A simulation, which is set to reproduce an intersection passing case between an autonomous car and a human driving car, is conducted to demonstrate the benefit of the novel courteous control policy.
ContributorsWang, Yiwei (Author) / Zhang, Wenlong (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
In the development of autonomous ground vehicles (AGVs), how to guarantee vehicle lateral stability is one of the most critical aspects. Based on nonlinear vehicle lateral and tire dynamics, new driving requirements of AGVs demand further studies and analyses of vehicle lateral stability control strategies. To achieve comprehensive analyses and

In the development of autonomous ground vehicles (AGVs), how to guarantee vehicle lateral stability is one of the most critical aspects. Based on nonlinear vehicle lateral and tire dynamics, new driving requirements of AGVs demand further studies and analyses of vehicle lateral stability control strategies. To achieve comprehensive analyses and stability-guaranteed vehicle lateral driving control, this dissertation presents three main contributions.First, a new method is proposed to estimate and analyze vehicle lateral driving stability regions, which provide a direct and intuitive demonstration for stability control of AGVs. Based on a four-wheel vehicle model and a nonlinear 2D analytical LuGre tire model, a local linearization method is applied to estimate vehicle lateral driving stability regions by analyzing vehicle local stability at each operation point on a phase plane. The obtained stability regions are conservative because both vehicle and tire stability are simultaneously considered. Such a conservative feature is specifically important for characterizing the stability properties of AGVs. Second, to analyze vehicle stability, two novel features of the estimated vehicle lateral driving stability regions are studied. First, a shifting vector is formulated to explicitly describe the shifting feature of the lateral stability regions with respect to the vehicle steering angles. Second, dynamic margins of the stability regions are formulated and applied to avoid the penetration of vehicle state trajectory with respect to the region boundaries. With these two features, the shiftable stability regions are feasible for real-time stability analysis. Third, to keep the vehicle states (lateral velocity and yaw rate) always stay in the shiftable stability regions, different control methods are developed and evaluated. Based on different vehicle control configurations, two dynamic sliding mode controllers (SMC) are designed. To better control vehicle stability without suffering chattering issues in SMC, a non-overshooting model predictive control is proposed and applied. To further save computational burden for real-time implementation, time-varying control-dependent invariant sets and time-varying control-dependent barrier functions are proposed and adopted in a stability-guaranteed vehicle control problem. Finally, to validate the correctness and effectiveness of the proposed theories, definitions, and control methods, illustrative simulations and experimental results are presented and discussed.
ContributorsHuang, Yiwen (Author) / Chen, Yan (Thesis advisor) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Yong, Sze Zheng (Committee member) / Zhang, Wenlong (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
As the explorations beyond the Earth's boundaries continue to evolve, researchers and engineers strive to develop versatile technologies capable of adapting to unknown space conditions. For instance, the utilization of Screw-Propelled Vehicles (SPVs) and robotics that utilize helical screws propulsion to transverse planetary bodies is a growing area of interest.

As the explorations beyond the Earth's boundaries continue to evolve, researchers and engineers strive to develop versatile technologies capable of adapting to unknown space conditions. For instance, the utilization of Screw-Propelled Vehicles (SPVs) and robotics that utilize helical screws propulsion to transverse planetary bodies is a growing area of interest. An example of such technology is the Extant Exobiology Life Surveyor (EELS), a snake-like robot currently developed by the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) to explore the surface of Saturn’s moon, Enceladus. However, the utilization of such a mechanism requires a deep and thorough understanding of screw mobility in uncertain conditions. The main approach to exploring screw dynamics and optimal design involves the utilization of Discrete Element Method (DEM) simulations to assess interactions and behavior of screws when interacting with granular terrains. In this investigation, the Simplified Johnson-Kendall-Roberts (SJKR) model is implemented into the utilized simulation environment to account for cohesion effects similar to what is experienced on celestial bodies like Enceladus. The model is verified and validated through experimental and theoretical testing. Subsequently, the performance characteristics of screws are explored under varying parameters, such as thread depth, number of screw starts, and the material’s cohesion level. The study has examined significant relationships between the parameters under investigation and their influence on the screw performance.
ContributorsAbdelrahim, Mohammad (Author) / Marvi, Hamid (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
While wearable soft robots have successfully addressed many inherent design limitations faced by wearable rigid robots, they possess a unique set of challenges due to their soft and compliant nature. Some of these challenges are present in the sensing, modeling, control and evaluation of wearable soft robots. Machine learning algorithms

While wearable soft robots have successfully addressed many inherent design limitations faced by wearable rigid robots, they possess a unique set of challenges due to their soft and compliant nature. Some of these challenges are present in the sensing, modeling, control and evaluation of wearable soft robots. Machine learning algorithms have shown promising results for sensor fusion with wearable robots, however, they require extensive data to train models for different users and experimental conditions. Modeling soft sensors and actuators require characterizing non-linearity and hysteresis, which complicates deriving an analytical model. Experimental characterization can capture the characteristics of non-linearity and hysteresis but requires developing a synthesized model for real-time control. Controllers for wearable soft robots must be robust to compensate for unknown disturbances that arise from the soft robot and its interaction with the user. Since developing dynamic models for soft robots is complex, inaccuracies that arise from the unmodeled dynamics lead to significant disturbances that the controller needs to compensate for. In addition, obtaining a physical model of the human-robot interaction is complex due to unknown human dynamics during walking. Finally, the performance of soft robots for wearable applications requires extensive experimental evaluation to analyze the benefits for the user. To address these challenges, this dissertation focuses on the sensing, modeling, control and evaluation of soft robots for wearable applications. A model-based sensor fusion algorithm is proposed to improve the estimation of human joint kinematics, with a soft flexible robot that requires compact and lightweight sensors. To overcome limitations with rigid sensors, an inflatable soft haptic sensor is developed to enable gait sensing and haptic feedback. Through experimental characterization, a mathematical model is derived to quantify the user's ground reaction forces and the delivered haptic force. Lastly, the performance of a wearable soft exosuit in assisting human users during lifting tasks is evaluated, and the benefits obtained from the soft robot assistance are analyzed.
ContributorsQuiñones Yumbla, Emiliano (Author) / Zhang, Wenlong (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Marvi, Hamid (Committee member) / Sugar, Thomas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
The Soft Robotic Hip Exosuit (SR-HExo) was designed, fabricated, and tested in treadmill walking experiments with healthy participants to gauge effectivity of the suit in assisting locomotion and in expanding the basin of entrainment as a method of rehabilitation. The SR-HExo consists of modular, compliant materials to move freely with

The Soft Robotic Hip Exosuit (SR-HExo) was designed, fabricated, and tested in treadmill walking experiments with healthy participants to gauge effectivity of the suit in assisting locomotion and in expanding the basin of entrainment as a method of rehabilitation. The SR-HExo consists of modular, compliant materials to move freely with a user’s range of motion and is actuated with X-oriented flat fabric pneumatic artificial muscles (X-ff-PAM) that contract when pressurized and can generate 190N of force at 200kPa in a 0.3 sec window. For use in gait assistance experiments, X-ff-PAM actuators were placed anterior and posterior to the right hip joint. Extension assistance and flexion assistance was provided in 10-45% and 50-90% of the gait cycle, respectively. Device effectivity was determined through range of motion (ROM) preservation and hip flexor and extensor muscular activity reduction. While the active suit reduced average hip ROM by 4o from the target 30o, all monitored muscles experienced significant reductions in electrical activity. The gluteus maximus and biceps femoris experienced electrical activity reduction of 13.1% and 6.6% respectively and the iliacus and rectus femoris experienced 10.7% and 27.7% respectively. To test suit rehabilitative potential, the actuators were programmed to apply periodic torque perturbations to induce locomotor entrainment. An X-ff-PAM was contracted at the subject’s preferred gait frequency and, in randomly ordered increments of 3%, increased up to 15% beyond. Perturbations located anterior and posterior to the hip were tested separately to assess impact of location on entrainment characteristics. All 11 healthy participants achieved entrainment in all 12 experimental conditions in both suit orientations. Phase-locking consistently occurred around toe-off phase of the gait cycle (GC). Extension perturbations synchronized earlier in the gait cycle (before 60% GC where peak hip extension occurs) than flexion perturbations (just after 60% GC at the transition from full hip extension to hip flexion), across group averaged results. The study demonstrated the suit can significantly extend the basin of entrainment and improve transient response compared to previously reported results and confirms that a single stable attractor exists during gait entrainment to unidirectional hip perturbations.
ContributorsBaye-Wallace, Lily (Author) / Lee, Hyunglae (Thesis advisor) / Marvi, Hamidreza (Committee member) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Technological progress in robot sensing, design, and fabrication, and the availability of open source software frameworks such as the Robot Operating System (ROS), are advancing the applications of swarm robotics from toy problems to real-world tasks such as surveillance, precision agriculture, search-and-rescue, and infrastructure inspection. These applications will require the

Technological progress in robot sensing, design, and fabrication, and the availability of open source software frameworks such as the Robot Operating System (ROS), are advancing the applications of swarm robotics from toy problems to real-world tasks such as surveillance, precision agriculture, search-and-rescue, and infrastructure inspection. These applications will require the development of robot controllers and system architectures that scale well with the number of robots and that are robust to robot errors and failures. To achieve this, one approach is to design decentralized robot control policies that require only local sensing and local, ad-hoc communication. In particular, stochastic control policies can be designed that are agnostic to individual robot identities and do not require a priori information about the environment or sophisticated computation, sensing, navigation, or communication capabilities. This dissertation presents novel swarm control strategies with these properties for detecting and mapping static targets, which represent features of interest, in an unknown, bounded, obstacle-free environment. The robots move on a finite spatial grid according to the time-homogeneous transition probabilities of a Discrete-Time Discrete-State (DTDS) Markov chain model, and they exchange information with other robots within their communication range using a consensus (agreement) protocol. This dissertation extend theoretical guarantees on multi-robot consensus over fixed and time-varying communication networks with known connectivity properties to consensus over the networks that have Markovian switching dynamics and no presumed connectivity. This dissertation develops such swarm consensus strategies for detecting a single feature in the environment, tracking multiple features, and reconstructing a discrete distribution of features modeled as an occupancy grid map. The proposed consensus approaches are validated in numerical simulations and in 3D physics-based simulations of quadrotors in Gazebo. The scalability of the proposed approaches is examined through extensive numerical simulation studies over different swarm populations and environment sizes.
ContributorsShirsat, Aniket (Author) / Berman, Spring (Thesis advisor) / Lee, Hyunglae (Committee member) / Marvi, Hamid (Committee member) / Saripalli, Srikanth (Committee member) / Gharavi, Lance (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022