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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Distributed and Adaptive Target Tracking with a Sensor Network

Michael A. Jacobs (5929805) 10 June 2019 (has links)
<div>Ensuring the robustness and resilience of safety-critical systems from civil aviation to military surveillance technologies requires improvements to target tracking capabilities. Implementing target tracking as a distributed function can improve the quality and availability of information for end users. Any errors in the model of a target's dynamics or a sensor network's measurement process will result in estimates with degraded accuracy or even filter divergence. This dissertation solves a distributed estimation problem for estimating the state of a dynamical system and the parameters defining a model of that system.</div><div>The novelty of this work lies in the ability of a sensor network to maintain consensus on state and parameter estimates through local communications between sensor platforms.</div>
22

Smart Manufacturing Using Control and Optimization

Harsha Naga Teja Nimmala (6849257) 16 October 2019 (has links)
<p>Energy management has become a major concern in the past two decades with the increasing energy prices, overutilization of natural resources and increased carbon emissions. According to the department of Energy the industrial sector solely consumes 22.4% of the energy produced in the country [1]. This calls for an urgent need for the industries to design and implement energy efficient practices by analyzing the energy consumption, electricity data and making use of energy efficient equipment. Although, utility companies are providing incentives to consumer participating in Demand Response programs, there isn’t an active implementation of energy management principles from the consumer’s side. Technological advancements in controls, automation, optimization and big data can be harnessed to achieve this which in other words is referred to as “Smart Manufacturing”. In this research energy management techniques have been designed for two SEU (Significant Energy Use) equipment HVAC systems, Compressors and load shifting in manufacturing environments using control and optimization.</p> <p>The addressed energy management techniques associated with each of the SEUs are very generic in nature which make them applicable for most of the industries. Firstly, the loads or the energy consuming equipment has been categorized into flexible and non-flexible loads based on their priority level and flexibility in running schedule. For the flexible loads, an optimal load scheduler has been modelled using Mixed Integer Linear Programming (MILP) method that find carries out load shifting by using the predicted demand of the rest of the plant and scheduling the loads during the low demand periods. The cases of interruptible loads and non-interruptible have been solved to demonstrate load shifting. This essentially resulted in lowering the peak demand and hence cost savings for both “Time-of-Use” and Demand based price schemes. </p> <p>The compressor load sharing problem was next considered for optimal distribution of loads among VFD equipped compressors running in parallel to meet the demand. The model is based on MILP problem and case studies was carried out for heavy duty (>10HP) and light duty compressors (<=10HP). Using the compressor scheduler, there was about 16% energy and cost saving for the light duty compressors and 14.6% for the heavy duty compressors</p> <p>HVAC systems being one of the major energy consumer in manufacturing industries was modelled using the generic lumped parameter method. An Electroplating facility named Electro-Spec was modelled in Simulink and was validated using the real data that was collected from the facility. The Mean Absolute Error (MAE) was about 0.39 for the model which is suitable for implementing controllers for the purpose of energy management. MATLAB and Simulink were used to design and implement the state-of-the-art Model Predictive Control for the purpose of energy efficient control. The MPC was chosen due to its ability to easily handle Multi Input Multi Output Systems, system constraints and its optimal nature. The MPC resulted in a temperature response with a rise time of 10 minutes and a steady state error of less than 0.001. Also from the input response, it was observed that the MPC provided just enough input for the temperature to stay at the set point and as a result led to about 27.6% energy and cost savings. Thus this research has a potential of energy and cost savings and can be readily applied to most of the manufacturing industries that use HVAC, Compressors and machines as their primary energy consumer.</p><br>
23

RELOCALIZATION AND LOOP CLOSING IN VISION SIMULTANEOUS LOCALIZATION AND MAPPING (VSLAM) OF A MOBILE ROBOT USING ORB METHOD

Venkatanaga Amrusha Aryasomyajula (8728027) 24 April 2020 (has links)
<p><a>It is essential for a mobile robot during autonomous navigation to be able to detect revisited places or loop closures while performing Vision Simultaneous Localization And Mapping (VSLAM). Loop closing has been identified as one of the critical data association problem when building maps. It is an efficient way to eliminate errors and improve the accuracy of the robot localization and mapping. In order to solve loop closing problem, the ORB-SLAM algorithm, a feature based simultaneous localization and mapping system that operates in real time is used. This system includes loop closing and relocalization and allows automatic initialization. </a></p> <p>In order to check the performance of the algorithm, the monocular and stereo and RGB-D cameras are used. The aim of this thesis is to show the accuracy of relocalization and loop closing process using ORB SLAM algorithm in a variety of environmental settings. The performance of relocalization and loop closing in different challenging indoor scenarios are demonstrated by conducting various experiments. Experimental results show the applicability of the approach in real time application like autonomous navigation.</p>
24

A HUB-CI MODEL FOR NETWORKED TELEROBOTICS IN COLLABORATIVE MONITORING OF AGRICULTURAL GREENHOUSES

Ashwin Sasidharan Nair (6589922) 15 May 2019 (has links)
Networked telerobots are operated by humans through remote interactions and have found applications in unstructured environments, such as outer space, underwater, telesurgery, manufacturing etc. In precision agricultural robotics, target monitoring, recognition and detection is a complex task, requiring expertise, hence more efficiently performed by collaborative human-robot systems. A HUB is an online portal, a platform to create and share scientific and advanced computing tools. HUB-CI is a similar tool developed by PRISM center at Purdue University to enable cyber-augmented collaborative interactions over cyber-supported complex systems. Unlike previous HUBs, HUB-CI enables both physical and virtual collaboration between several groups of human users along with relevant cyber-physical agents. This research, sponsored in part by the Binational Agricultural Research and Development Fund (BARD), implements the HUB-CI model to improve the Collaborative Intelligence (CI) of an agricultural telerobotic system for early detection of anomalies in pepper plants grown in greenhouses. Specific CI tools developed for this purpose include: (1) Spectral image segmentation for detecting and mapping to anomalies in growing pepper plants; (2) Workflow/task administration protocols for managing/coordinating interactions between software, hardware, and human agents, engaged in the monitoring and detection, which would reliably lead to precise, responsive mitigation. These CI tools aim to minimize interactions’ conflicts and errors that may impede detection effectiveness, thus reducing crops quality. Simulated experiments performed show that planned and optimized collaborative interactions with HUB-CI (as opposed to ad-hoc interactions) yield significantly fewer errors and better detection by improving the system efficiency by between 210% to 255%. The anomaly detection method was tested on the spectral image data available in terms of number of anomalous pixels for healthy plants, and plants with stresses providing statistically significant results between the different classifications of plant health using ANOVA tests (P-value = 0). Hence, it improves system productivity by leveraging collaboration and learning based tools for precise monitoring for healthy growth of pepper plants in greenhouses.
25

Optimal Information-Weighted Kalman Consensus Filter

Shiraz Khan (8782250) 30 April 2020 (has links)
<div>Distributed estimation algorithms have received considerable attention lately, owing to the advancements in computing, communication and battery technologies. They offer increased scalability, robustness and efficiency. In applications such as formation flight, where any discrepancies between sensor estimates has severe consequences, it becomes crucial to require consensus of estimates amongst all sensors. The Kalman Consensus Filter (KCF) is a seminal work in the field of distributed consensus-based estimation, which accomplishes this. </div><div><br></div><div>However, the KCF algorithm is mathematically sub-optimal, and does not account for the cross-correlation between the estimates of sensors. Other popular algorithms, such as the Information weighted Consensus Filter (ICF) rely on ad-hoc definitions and approximations, rendering them sub-optimal as well. Another major drawback of KCF is that it utilizes unweighted consensus, i.e., each sensor assigns equal weightage to the estimates of its neighbors. This fact has been shown to cause severely degraded performance of KCF when some sensors cannot observe the target, and can even cause the algorithm to be unstable.</div><div><br></div><div>In this work, we develop a novel algorithm, which we call Optimal Kalman Consensus Filter for Weighted Directed Graphs (OKCF-WDG), which addresses both of these limitations of existing algorithms. OKCF-WDG integrates the KCF formulation with that of matrix-weighted consensus. The algorithm achieves consensus on a weighted digraph, enabling a directed flow of information within the network. This aspect of the algorithm is shown to offer significant performance improvements over KCF, as the information may be directed from well-performing sensors to other sensors which have high estimation error due to environmental factors or sensor limitations. We validate the algorithm through simulations and compare it to existing algorithms. It is shown that the proposed algorithm outperforms existing algorithms by a considerable margin, especially in the case where some sensors are naive (i.e., cannot observe the target).</div>
26

Hierarchical Combined Plant and Control Design for Thermal Management Systems

Austin L Nash (8063924) 03 December 2019 (has links)
Over the last few decades, many factors, including increased electrification, have led to a critical need for fast and efficient transient cooling. Thermal management systems (TMSs) are typically designed using steady-state assumptions and to accommodate the most extreme operating conditions that could be encountered, such as maximum expected heat loads. Unfortunately, by designing systems in this manner, closed-loop transient performance is neglected and often constrained. If not constrained, conventional design approaches result in oversized systems that are less efficient under nominal operation. Therefore, it is imperative that \emph{transient} component modeling and subsystem interactions be considered at the design stage to avoid costly future redesigns. Simply put, as technological advances create the need for rapid transient cooling, a new design paradigm is needed to realize next generation systems to meet these demands. <br><br>In this thesis, I develop a new design approach for TMSs called hierarchical control co-design (HCCD). More specifically, I develop a HCCD algorithm aimed at optimizing high-fidelity design and control for a TMS across a system hierarchy. This is accomplished in part by integrating system level (SL) CCD with detailed component level (CL) design optimization. The lower-fidelity SL CCD algorithm incorporates feedback control into the design of a TMS to ensure controllability and robust transient response to exogenous disturbances, and the higher-fidelity CL design optimization algorithms provide a way of designing detailed components to achieve the desired performance needed at the SL. Key specifications are passed back and forth between levels of the hierarchy at each iteration to converge on an optimal design that is responsive to desired objectives at each level. The resulting HCCD algorithm permits the design and control of a TMS that is not only optimized for steady-state efficiency, but that can be designed for robustness to transient disturbances while achieving said disturbance rejection with minimal compromise to system efficiency. Several case studies are used to demonstrate the utility of the algorithm in designing systems with different objectives. Additionally, high-fidelity thermal modeling software is used to validate a solution to the proposed model-based design process. <br>
27

New Approaches to Distributed State Estimation, Inference and Learning with Extensions to Byzantine-Resilience

Aritra Mitra (9154928) 29 July 2020 (has links)
<div>In this thesis, we focus on the problem of estimating an unknown quantity of interest, when the information required to do so is dispersed over a network of agents. In particular, each agent in the network receives sequential observations generated by the unknown quantity, and the collective goal of the network is to eventually learn this quantity by means of appropriately crafted information diffusion rules. The abstraction described above can be used to model a variety of problems ranging from environmental monitoring of a dynamical process using autonomous robot teams, to statistical inference using a network of processors, to social learning in groups of individuals. The limited information content of each agent, coupled with dynamically changing networks, the possibility of adversarial attacks, and constraints imposed by the communication channels, introduce various unique challenges in addressing such problems. We contribute towards systematically resolving some of these challenges.</div><div><br></div><div>In the first part of this thesis, we focus on tracking the state of a dynamical process, and develop a distributed observer for the most general class of LTI systems, linear measurement models, and time-invariant graphs. To do so, we introduce the notion of a multi-sensor observable decomposition - a generalization of the Kalman observable canonical decomposition for a single sensor. We then consider a scenario where certain agents in the network are compromised based on the classical Byzantine adversary model. For this worst-case adversarial setting, we identify certain fundamental necessary conditions that are a blend of system- and network-theoretic requirements. We then develop an attack-resilient, provably-correct, fully distributed state estimation algorithm. Finally, by drawing connections to the concept of age-of-information for characterizing information freshness, we show how our framework can be extended to handle a broad class of time-varying graphs. Notably, in each of the cases above, our proposed algorithms guarantee exponential convergence at any desired convergence rate.</div><div><br></div><div>In the second part of the thesis, we turn our attention to the problem of distributed hypothesis testing/inference, where each agent receives a stream of stochastic signals generated by an unknown static state that belongs to a finite set of hypotheses. To enable each agent to uniquely identify the true state, we develop a novel distributed learning rule that employs a min-protocol for data-aggregation, as opposed to the large body of existing techniques that rely on "belief-averaging". We establish consistency of our rule under minimal requirements on the observation model and the network structure, and prove that it guarantees exponentially fast convergence to the truth with probability 1. Most importantly, we establish that the learning rate of our algorithm is network-independent, and a strict improvement over all existing approaches. We also develop a simple variant of our learning algorithm that can account for misbehaving agents. As the final contribution of this work, we develop communication-efficient rules for distributed hypothesis testing. Specifically, we draw on ideas from event-triggered control to reduce the number of communication rounds, and employ an adaptive quantization scheme that guarantees exponentially fast learning almost surely, even when just 1 bit is used to encode each hypothesis. </div>
28

Fabrication and Automation of a Power-Conserving USV in Moving Water

Joseph Peter Wichlinski (11015460) 23 July 2021 (has links)
Water pollution in drinking water is a major concern in rural areas that depend on local surface and ground water supplies. The Amazon river, for example, has800 thousand rural inhabitants, many of whom do not have access to treated water. Reaching the Amazon River to collect these water samples is already a complicated task. With constantly changing floodplains, and therefore water quality, the ability to collect water samples remotely and autonomously can help rural areas monitor their drinking water. There have been several studies investigating different unmanned surface vehicle (USV)prototypes and data collection methods. However, none have specifically made a compact USV to maneuver in rivers, while aiming to conserve energy to drive longer distances. This paper describes an in-depth design, fabrication, and automation process for a USV to drive in the Wabash River. The USV monitors its own location, speed, and battery voltage for power consumption analysis. As proof of concept, the USV measures water depth during field studies performed in Lake Harner, Indiana and the Wabash River. These field studies yield affirming results for the controls logic and power conservation of the designed USV.<br>
29

Multi-Scale, Multi-Modal, High-Speed 3D Shape Measurement

Yatong An (6587408) 10 June 2019 (has links)
<div>With robots expanding their applications in more and more scenarios, practical problems from different scenarios are challenging current 3D measurement techniques. For instance, infrastructure inspection robots need large-scale and high-spatial-resolution 3D data for crack and defect detection, medical robots need 3D data well registered with temperature information, and warehouse robots need multi-resolution 3D shape measurement to adapt to different tasks. In the past decades, a lot of progress has been made in improving the performance of 3D shape measurement methods. Yet, measurement scale and speed and the fusion of multiple modalities of 3D shape measurement techniques remain vital aspects to be improved for robots to have a more complete perception of the real scene. In this dissertation, we will focus on the digital fringe projection technique, which usually can achieve high-accuracy 3D data, and expand the capability of that technique to complicated robot applications by 1) extending the measurement scale, 2) registering with multi-modal information, and 3) improving the measurement speed of the digital fringe projection technique.</div><div><br></div><div>The measurement scale of the digital fringe projection technique mainly focused on a small scale, from several centimeters to tens of centimeters, due to the lack of a flexible and convenient calibration method for a large-scale digital fringe projection system. In this study, we first developed a flexible and convenient large-scale calibration method and then extended the measurement scale of the digital fringe projection technique to several meters. The meter scale is needed in many large-scale robot applications, including large infrastructure inspection. Our proposed method includes two steps: 1) accurately calibrate intrinsics (i.e., focal lengths and principal points) with a small calibration board at close range where both the camera and projector are out of focus, and 2) calibrate the extrinsic parameters (translation and rotation) from camera to projector with the assistance of a low-accuracy large-scale 3D sensor (e.g., Microsoft Kinect). The two-step strategy avoids fabricating a large and accurate calibration target, which is usually expensive and inconvenient for doing pose adjustments. With a small calibration board and a low-cost 3D sensor, we calibrated a large-scale 3D shape measurement system with a FOV of (1120 x 1900 x 1000) mm^3 and verified the correctness of our method.</div><div><br></div><div> Multi-modal information is required in applications such as medical robots, which may need both to capture the 3D geometry of objects and to monitor their temperature. To allow robots to have a more complete perception of the scene, we further developed a hardware system that can achieve real-time 3D geometry and temperature measurement. Specifically, we proposed a holistic approach to calibrate both a structured light system and a thermal camera under exactly the same world coordinate system, even though these two sensors do not share the same wavelength; and a computational framework to determine the sub-pixel corresponding temperature for each 3D point, as well as to discard those occluded points. Since the thermal 2D imaging and 3D visible imaging systems do not share the same spectrum of light, they can perform sensing simultaneously in real time. We developed a hardware system that achieved real-time 3D geometry and temperature measurement at 26Hz with 768 x 960 points per frame.</div><div><br></div><div> In dynamic applications, where the measured object or the 3D sensor could be in motion, the measurement speed will become an important factor to be considered. Previously, people projected additional fringe patterns for absolute phase unwrapping, which slowed down the measurement speed. To achieve higher measurement speed, we developed a method to unwrap a phase pixel by pixel by solely using geometric constraints of the structured light system without requiring additional image acquisition. Specifically, an artificial absolute phase map $\Phi_{min}$, at a given virtual depth plane $z = z_{min}$, is created from geometric constraints of the calibrated structured light system, such that the wrapped phase can be pixel-by-pixel unwrapped by referring to $\Phi_{min}$. Since $\Phi_{min}$ is defined in the projector space, the unwrapped phase obtained from this method is an absolute phase for each pixel. Experimental results demonstrate the success of this proposed novel absolute-phase unwrapping method. However, the geometric constraint-based phase unwrapping method using a virtual plane is constrained in a certain depth range. The depth range limitations cause difficulties in two measurement scenarios: measuring an object with larger depth variation, and measuring a dynamic object that could move beyond the depth range. To address the problem of depth limitation, we further propose to take advantage of an additional 3D scanner and use additional external information to extend the maximum measurement range of the pixel-wise phase unwrapping method. The additional 3D scanner can provide a more detailed reference phase map $\Phi_{ref}$ to assist us to do absolute phase unwrapping without the depth constraint. Experiments demonstrate that our method, assisted by an additional 3D scanner, can work for a large depth range, and the maximum speed of the low-cost 3D scanner is not necessarily an upper bound of the speed of the structured light system. Assisted by Kinect V2, our structured light system achieved 53Hz with a resolution 1600 x 1000 pixels when we measured dynamic objects that were moving in a large depth range.</div><div><br></div><div> In summary, we significantly advanced the 3D shape measurement technology for robots to have a more complete perception of the scene by enhancing the digital fringe projection technique in measurement scale (space domain), speed (time domain), and fusion with other modality information. This research can potentially enable robots to have a better understanding of the scene for more complicated tasks, and broadly impact many other academic studies and industrial practices.</div>
30

An Analysis of a Pressure Compensated Control System of an Automotive Vane Pump

Ryan P Jenkins (6331784) 10 June 2019 (has links)
<div>Pressure compensated vane pump systems are an attractive solution in many automotive applications to supply hydraulic power required for cooling, lubrication, and actuation of control elements such as transmission clutches. These systems feature variable displacement vane pumps which offer reductions in parasitic loads on the engine and in wasted hydraulic energy at high engine speeds when compared to traditional fixed displacement supply pumps. However, oscillations in a currently available pressure compensation system limits the achievable performance and therefore the application of this solution.</div><div>This dissertation presents the development and experimental validation of a lumped parameter model in MATLAB/Simulink of a current pressure compensated vane pump system for an automatic transmission oil supply application. An analysis of the performance of this system using the validated pump model and a developed black box control system model reveals that the low cost solenoid valve present in the control circuit to set the regulation pressure limits the achievable bandwidth to 1.84Hz and causes a significant time delay in the response. To address this limitation, as well as eliminate a non-minimum phase zero introduced by the case study’s control circuit architecture, an actively controlled electrohydraulic pressure compensation system is proposed. This proposed system is explored both experimentally and in simulation making use of the accuracy of the presented variable displacement vane pump model. Significant improvements in the achievable system performance are shown with both a simple PI control law (47% reduction in the pressure response time) and an advanced cascaded model following controller based on feedback linearization (58% reduction in the pressure response time). An analysis of these results reveals that implementing the proposed control system with a 5(L/min)/bar proportional valve with a 20Hz at ±100% (60Hz at ±50%) amplitude bandwidth and a PI control law is an economical path to achieving the best performance improvements for this automotive application.</div>

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