During the design specification phase, an alternative design matrix was made and evaluated based on the following parameters: number of bumpers, shape.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
First Year Robotics Platform By: Andria Farnham, Adam Selinger, Curtis Langley.
Advertisements

PARAMETERS & ASSUMPTIONS SOLID MODELBACKGROUND TRENCHING AND LAYING CABLE ON THE LUNAR SURFACE MEHRDAD HOOSHMAND, CITY COLLEGE OF NEW YORK POWER REQUIREMENTS.
ECE 477 Final Presentation Team 03 - Spring 2013 Ryan Pawling Spencer Julian Josh Hunsberger Robert Harris.
» When you have completed this module you will know, what components do, what they physically look like and how they are represented in a circuit diagram.
SOUTHEASTCON I KARMA ECE IEEE SoutheastCon Hardware Competition Must build an autonomous robot that can –Start at rest at the Starting Station.
Objectives The objective of this design process was to create a small, autonomous robot capable of completing a set of predefined objectives within an.
In Order of Presentation: Ishaan Sandhu DannY Kang Arslan Qaiser Eric Otte Anuar Tazabekov Capacitive Rain Sensor for Automatic Wiper Control.
October 21, 2003 ECE Senior Design1 Autonomous GPS-BOT Preliminary Design Review by Kery Hardwick, Yevgeniy Khasanov, Naoya Kinuta, Zhe Chuan Luo.
Preliminary Design Review
Field Navigational GPS Robot Final Presentation & Review Chris Foley, Kris Horn, Richard Neil Pittman, Michael Willis.
TETRIX/VEX Challenge (use either robot hardware) There will be two events for the May Madness 2010 Challenge –The Grand Challenge - completely autonomous.
Critical Design Review Colorado State University - Pueblo April 15, 2005.
Simultaneous Localization and Map Building System for Prototype Mars Rover CECS 398 Capstone Design I October 24, 2001.
Curry Mouse EE296 Final Presentation Wednesday, May 10, 2006.
Deon Blaauw Modular Robot Design University of Stellenbosch Department of Electric and Electronic Engineering.
Autonomous Control of Scalextric Slot Car on User-Defined Track Siddharth Kamath Souma Mondal Dhaval Patel School of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
Basics of Sensors. A sensor is a device which is used to sense the surroundings of it & gives some useful information about it. This information is used.
Lunar Transportation System GISS Apprentices’ Design Main Objectives: Using current and emerging technological developments, design a system capable of.
University of Pennsylvania Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering ABSTRACT: Solar racing has increased in popularity over the past few years.
Fuzzy control of a mobile robot Implementation using a MATLAB-based rapid prototyping system.
Embedded Microcomputer Systems Andrew Karpenko 1 Prepared for Technical Presentation February 25 th, 2011.
NEEDS ANALYSIS & REQUIREMENTS SPECIFICATION Southeast Con 1B “Success” Senior Design Team Louis Cooper Evan Marshall Chelsea Ogle Lorenzo Smith Ivan Vargas.
Team Spot A Cooperative Robotics Problem A Robotics Academy Project: Laurel Hesch Emily Mower Addie Sutphen.
By the end of this chapter, you should:  Understand the properties of an engineering requirement and know how to develop well-formed requirements that.
Xtreme Robot Olympiad Programming with Sensors Dr. Peter Laz Associate Professor Department of Engineering University of Denver.
A.G.I.L.E Autonomously Guided Intelligent Lawn Equipment Team Members: Brad Ramsey Derek Rodriguez Dane Wielgopolan Project Advisors: Dr. Joel Schipper.
Programming Concepts Part B Ping Hsu. Functions A function is a way to organize the program so that: – frequently used sets of instructions or – a set.
 eBlock is an electronics block.  It can define as embedded system building block used in sensor based system.  Enable non-experts to build basic small-scale.
The Battle Roach Robot Carla J. Araile, New York City College of Technology Undergraduate Student Anthony Francis, New York City College of Technology.
Available at: Lesson 3.6 – Program Line Follower in Autonomous Mode Program Line Follower in Autonomous Mode.
Sonar Mapping: What is Sonar Mapping?  Sonar mapping is a technique used to study the distance between objects. Sonar creates sound waves that hit a surface.
To come up with a practicum project that full filled the 411 requirements Create a fun project that would get kids interested in science and engineering.
By: Jason Jayanty and Christopher Bussetti Mentors: Rebecca Vecere, Dr. Siva Thangam, Professor Joseph Miles Expandable Deployed Lunar Base for the Purpose.
Project Proposal: Student: Rowan Pivetta Supervisor: Dr Nasser Asgari.
CS-EE 481 Spring Founder’s Day, 2006 University of Portland School of Engineering Electric Vehicle Drive System Authors Steven Arlint Abdullah Binsaeed.
The Need Specification. References  Adapted from:  Design for Electrical and Computer Engineers, first edition, by Ralph M. Ford and Chris S. Coulston.
Hardware Sponsors National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
Automatic accident avoiding system PROJECT MEMBERS MUTHUKUMAR.K (05ME33) SAKTHIDHASAN.S (05ME39) SAKTHIVEL.N (05ME40) VINOTH.S (05ME56) PROJECT GUIDE:
Project Umpqua Electric Vehicle Drive System Team Abdullah Binsaeed Dustin Buscho Steven Arlint Advisor Dr. Albright Industry Representative Mr. Menig.
The Recycling Robot SECON Team B Mid-Term Presentation.
Mid-Semester Presentation Design I October 3, 2013.
LUNAR Lunar Unmanned Navigation and Acquisition Robot SECON I Senior Design I Final Design Review November 29, 2007.
Southeastern Conference 2014 Final Presentation. The Team Alex Holeczy Computer Engineering - Navigation - Debugging Thomas McCollum Electrical Engineering.
Electronics and Robotics Merit Badges Class 5 – Programming Robot Controllers for Sumo Competition 12/23/2015 Electronics and Robotics Merit Badges - Class.
PHY 235 Robotics Workshop Day 4 Robotic Behaviors, Light Sensing, Voltage Dividers, LCD-MOD.
Rajeev Rai Bhatia 2K7-MRCE-ME-040. Team: Rajeev R Bhatia Tushar Chugh Adeel Kidwai Mentor: Prof. M.S. Giri.
The George Washington University Electrical & Computer Engineering Department ECE 002 Dr. S. Ahmadi Class3/Lab 2.
SECON 2012 Final Presentation. Team Michael Helmbrecht Electrical Engineer Measurement Tasks Course Construction Chris Nicholas Computer Engineer Measurement.
Niket Sheth Chris Karman Erik Scherbenske Peter van der Hoop.
LUNaR SECON I Senior Design I Midterm Presentation October 4, 2007.
The Recycling Robot SECON Team B Mid-Term Presentation.
Robot Project by Ahmad Shtaiyat Supervised by Dr. Salem Al-Agtash.
Software Narrative Autonomous Targeting Vehicle (ATV) Daniel Barrett Sebastian Hening Sandunmalee Abeyratne Anthony Myers.
We thank the Office of Research and Sponsored Programs for supporting this research, and Learning & Technology Services for printing this poster. Fully-Autonomous.
UNH FIREFIGHTING ROBOT Ryan Morin, Craig Shurtleff, Andrew Levenbaum, Stephen Tobin, and Liam O’Connor University of New Hampshire: College of Engineering.
IEEE South East Conference 2016 MID-SEMESTER PRESENTATION.
DEPARTMENT OF EEE IFET COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING VILLUPURAM,TAMIL NADU,INDIA Project proposal For IEEE CS 70 th Anniversary Student Challenge On PATHLINE.
The entire system was tested in a small swimming pool. The fully constructed submarine is shown in Fig. 14. The only hardware that was not on the submarine.
NASA Robotic Mining Competition. Controllers Arduino Mega - controls motors and sensors Raspberry Pi - Linux based computer that has the autonomous.
Self-Navigation Robot Using 360˚ Sensor Array
Programming & Sensors.
PRESENTATION ON Line follower robot.
Intelligence Crane By: Maysoon Ashayer Muna Sholi Supervised by:
Smart Vehicles – Summary
Design and Development of an Autonomous Surface Watercraft
ARDUINO LINE FOLLOWER ROBOT
Electrical Engineer Responsibilities
TG-1101 Engineering Design I Introduction to “Total Design” and “Systems Engineering Design Process” (Week 2)
Programming Concepts (Part B) ENGR 10 Introduction to Engineering
Combination Lock Opener
Presentation transcript:

During the design specification phase, an alternative design matrix was made and evaluated based on the following parameters: number of bumpers, shape of bumpers, number of target light sensors, height of beacon light sensor, and finally the floor sensor module location. The 4 conceptual designs were evaluated then, a prototype was constructed that employed three target light sensors, a Beacon light sensor, a Floor Sensor Module for floor color recognition and a three bumper design. Robotics: Autonomous Devices Arena with obstacles target lights and navigational light Build an autonomous robot that can seek out and extinguish the opponents 2 target lights in under 3 minutes. The robot must be able to: Sense and remember the floor color. Locate and advance upon the navigation light. Locate, approach, and knock out the target lights. Circumnavigate basic obstacles. Speed and efficiency is imperative; the robot will be competing against other units. Floor Sensor Module Circuit (FSM) – designed for floor color recognition. The reflection of the emitted light from the LED to the floor would differ when on the white side of the arena than the black side of the arena. Programming The robot was programmed in C++/C language through the compatible HI-TECH Integrated Development Environment. Electrical Conceptual design Autonomous Robots are robots that can perform desired tasks in unstructured environments without continuous human guidance. Many kinds of robots have some degree of autonomy. Different robots can be autonomous in different ways. The current generation of autonomy is particularly desirable in fields such as space exploration, cleaning floors, mowing lawns, and waste water treatment. There are hundreds of applications for autonomous technology in the civilian market, from home and community applications to cameras at intersections. Autonomous robots are a very versatile field. It currently exist for civilian, commercial and research purposes. The objective of the robot project was to create a fully autonomous battle robot able to adapt accordingly to a dynamic environment. The robot’s mission was to navigate, take corrective courses of action in the presence of obstacles, locate, identify and extinguish the “enemy” territory’s target lights before the enemy robot extinguishes the Battle Roach’s home target lights. Sponsors: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) NASA New York City Research Initiative (NYCRI) Stevens Institute of Technology (SIT) Contributors: Dr. Siva Thangam, PI Prof. Joseph Miles, PI Sharif Abdelbaky, HSS Justen Garner, UGS Objectives Abstract Applications of Autonomous robots today and in the future Unmanned aerial vehicles Unmanned cars Autonomous robots on the assembly line Finding mines in demilitarized zones Researching alternative fuel sources Bumper Interrupt Support Board (BIS) – hardware interrupt designed for easy ON/OFF logic. Composed of a 74LS07N Hex Buffer IC, a pull-down resistor, and three micro-switches acting as bumpers. Stevens Institute of Technology custom-designed PIC microcontroller board. The board has both analog and digital inputs for data acquisition, a voltage divider circuit for the analog light sensors channels, and an Analog to Digital (A/D) Converters for voltage sensing, as well as a motor driver circuit for the two motors used. The programming could not be done without the flowcharts for they gave the logic in programming the robot. Program basic routines: Move Forward Move Backward Pivot right Pivot left Read light sensor data Motors off Main loop flowchart Bumper interrupt support Flowchart Results The Autonomous robot was able to: Navigate autonomously through the obstacles in the arena Use its bumper interrupt system for evasion. Detect the floor color and where it is using the Floor Sensor Module (FSM) for color differentiation through color reflectivity thresholds and a Beacon light sensor tower to use the navigation light. Detect target lights The battle robot competition has not taken place Robot Enemy Target Light Locating/Obstacle Avoidance Subsystem Goal: Identify the Conceptual Design with the Highest Probability of winning the competition All Combinations Conceptual Design 1 Conceptual Design 2 Conceptual Design 3 Conceptual Design 4 Number of Bumpers 2 Bumpers 3 Bumpers Shape of Bumpers Rounded - Front Split Rounded-180 Flying Bumpers w/Strings Pointy - Front Split Number of Target Light Sensors 1 3: 1Lt, 1Rt, 1 back 1 2: 1Lt, 1Rt Height of Beacon Sensor On Roof 6 in. above roof 3 in. above roof Floor Sensor Module Photo Resister Location Front Rear Acceptance Criteria Weight (by %) of Acceptance Criteria (apply last) Importance of Conceptual Design in meeting Acceptance Criteria Weighted Score Importance of Conceptual Design in meeting Acceptance Criteria Weighted Score Importance of Conceptual Design in meeting Acceptance Criteria Weighted Score Importance of Conceptual Design in meeting Acceptance Criteria Weighted Score Teams chose own acceptance criteria Doesn't draw down the battery (8 competitions) 20% Doesn't confuse the navigation light with target lights 30% Minimal Impact on software complexity 5% Crosses from Friendly to Enemy Territory in 15 seconds 10% Extinguishes both target lights in 35 seconds 5% After crossing over, the sub system detects light 1 and extinguishes it. Then it detects light 2 and extinguishes it. 15% Doesn't cross back to friendly territory after crossing into enemy territory 15% ======== Total Percentage =100%