DocumentCode :
2916305
Title :
Flexible tail motion estimation by electromagnetic induction for a biomimetic underwater vehicle
Author :
Guo, Jen-Hwa ; Li, Miao-Feng ; Martinez, S.D. ; Huang, Sheng-Wei ; Mu, Ling-Ji ; Yen, Wei-Kuo
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Eng. Sci. & Ocean Eng., Nat. Taiwan Univ., Taipei, Taiwan
fYear :
2012
fDate :
21-24 May 2012
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
6
Abstract :
In order to mimic a real fish, the back bracket of a biomimetic-underwater vehicle´s (BAUV´s) tail fin is composed of aluminum spacers with a flexible aluminum plate as the tail spline. The sway of the tail fin is driven by a motor and its motion is impeded by the water such that the rotation angle of the tail fin could not be calculated simply by a coordinate conversion. For precise tail fin control in a complex environment, the motion information of the tail fin is required. In this work, the development and setup of a magnetic field system is presented. The system is composed of a magnetic transmitter fixed on the robot fish´s body, and three magnetic receivers located along the fish tail, as a moving coil structure. Receiver and transmitter circuits were designed based on the resonance theory. When relative displacements and relative angles appear between the transmitter and receiver, the receiving side displays specific voltage signals, which are used to quantify the position and orientation of the moving coils. The shape of the BAUV tail fin is approximated by a body-spline equation. Three receiving coils information were used to interpolate the body-spline of the BAUV tail motion. A database that relates sensor data with the sensed positions of the BAUV tail fin is established. With the database, the system used the K-nearest algorithm to classify the digital signals that are conversed by the FPGA A/D function into the sensors positions, such that the motion of the tail fin can be estimated.
Keywords :
approximation theory; autonomous underwater vehicles; biomimetics; control engineering computing; database management systems; displacement control; field programmable gate arrays; interpolation; learning (artificial intelligence); mobile robots; motion control; position control; sensors; signal classification; splines (mechanical components); BAUV; FPGA A-D function; K-nearest algorithm; aluminum spacer; analog-to-digital function; approximation; biomimetic autonomous underwater vehicle; body-spline equation; coordinate conversion; database; digital signal classification; electromagnetic induction; field programmable gate array; flexible aluminum plate; flexible tail motion estimation; interpolation; magnetic field system; magnetic transmitter; motion impedance; moving coil orientation; moving coil position; moving coil structure; receiver circuit; relative angle; relative displacement; resonance theory; robot fish; rotation angle; sensor position; tail fin back bracket; tail fin control; tail fin motion information; tail fin sway; tail spline; transmitter circuit; Coils; Field programmable gate arrays; Magnetic fields; Magnetosphere; Marine animals; Receivers; Transmitters; biomimetic; fish tail; motion estimation; mutual inductance; underwater vehicle;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
OCEANS, 2012 - Yeosu
Conference_Location :
Yeosu
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-2089-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/OCEANS-Yeosu.2012.6263574
Filename :
6263574
Link To Document :
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