Design and Development of Autonomous Ground Vehicle For Wild Life Monitoring
Design and Development of Autonomous Ground Vehicle For Wild Life Monitoring
Design and Development of Autonomous Ground Vehicle For Wild Life Monitoring
KEYWORDS: autonomous vehicle, efficient algorithms; obstacle avoidance; SONAR sensor, surveillance, wild life
tracking
I. INTRODUCTION
Unmanned Ground Vehicles (UGV), have tremendous potential in military and civilian applications, specifically in
areas like reconnaissance, surveillance, target acquisition and monitoring etc. Usually, the vehicle will have a set of
sensors to perceive the environment, and will either autonomously make decisions about its behaviour or pass the
information to a human operator at a different location who will control the vehicle through tele-operation[1,2,3,4].
A fully autonomous robot has the competence to
• Acquire information about the milieu
• Work for aprotracted period without human mediation
• Move either all or part of itself throughout its operating milieu
• Avoid circumstances that are damaging to people, property, or itself.
An autonomous robot may also undergo a process called machine learning for accomplishing its tasks or adapting to
changing surroundings.
During the recent years, the researchers have been striving to achieve higher degree of autonomous mode in ground
vehicle to enhance operational performance by infusing microcontroller and software approach. However, it is seldom
seen in literature, any practitioner reporting the successful implementation of these models in wild life monitoring. The
extremely hostile conditions imposed by modern combat, outer space and the deep ocean environments have generated
the need for practical autonomous vehicles for military applications, space and ocean exploration. These relatively
near-team applications will drive the sophistication and cost of autonomous vehicle technology into the realm where
more mundane but more widespread applications such as automated public transportation will be possible. However,
significant technology advances will be necessary before even the simplest and most crucial applications can be
practically addressed. These advances will only be gained by implementing autonomous vehicle test beds and gaining
experience with the developing technology.
In the following sections, the research efforts taken towards achieving autonomy, the structural analysis and the
developmental challenges are reviewed in detail.
The hardware consists of DC motors to drive the ground vehicle, a camera installed with remapping algorithm which
ensures fail safe mechanism during any kind of signal loss.This would ensure that the robot would return to the base
station (or pre-determined location) [8]. The Atmel ATmega2560 Microcontroller, chosen for its low cost, high
efficiency and ease of programming, acts as processing hub for vehicle; it is fabricated with the following components:
• Auto pilot system
• GPS
Fabricated Model
The outer structure (see figure 4 and 5)was fabricatedusing Acrylic material for the following reasons:
• can be molded into various shapes
• can withstand high stress and strain
• weather proof and shock proof property
The AGV is integrated with microcontroller, sensors, sonar, GPS, auto pilot controller, telemetry device, servo
motors, ESC, gyro meter, accelerometer, magnetometer, barometer etc. to enable the wildlife monitoring application.
The software was been compiled in Keil using Embedded ‘C’ language [9].
Distortion energy theory is widely considered the most preferred failure theory used in the industry. Von Mises
stress is an excellent indicator of failure criterion. As seen in figure 8, the Von Mises stress on the AGV is lower than
the yield strength of acrylic material. Similarly, the combination of the principal stresses would also allow us to
calculate Von Mises strain or equivalent elastic strain as seen in figure 9.
Impact Analysis
Since, it was proposed to operate the AGV in rough terrains, like forests, a mechanical impact analysis was
conducted. Cad modelling for impact design has been carried out in Catia V5 R21 software [10]. The vehicle is tested
by driving it into a test wall at 3 m/s and 10 m/s.
The model for the contact-impact force was developed while keeping in mind the material and the geometric
properties of the colliding surfaces. The information on the relative positions and velocities contributed to the
development of an efficient test model, as seen in figure 9, and also accounted for energy dissipation. These features
were ensured with a continuous contact force model and the deformation (if any) is considered a continuous function
during the total period of contact.
The deformation generated on the robot design is .0600044 for 3m\s velocity. The deformation is very low along x-
axis as seen in Figure 10.
For the given velocity 3 m/s (figure 11), the Von-misses stress created in the AGV is 56.511 Mpa, the material did
not fail because the yield strength of acrylic is 69 Mpa.For the given velocity 10 m/s (figure 12), the VonMises stress
created in the AGV is 79.978 Mpa.At this velocity, the material would fail because the VonMises stress value is greater
than the yield strength of the acrylic material.
The autonomous unmanned ground vehicle was developed successfully and tested for structural integrity. A literature
review was conducted to study the sensor system used in autonomous UGV design, the challenges and techniques of
autonomous UGV navigation. Based on the results as seen in the testing and analysis section, it was concluded that the
system would be able to operate under harsh conditions, such as a forest zone, without compromising the intended
mission.The future prospect of project is to develop an intelligent automated guided vehicle (i-agv) based on the current
system, with defense functionalities. It can be achieved by introducing target locating and tracking mechanism. The
autonomous system could also be equipped with functionalities like high definition image and video recording, terrain
mapping, self-localization etc.Future systems could be developed utilizing an intuitive graphic user interface for UGV
navigation and thereby allowing a single station operator to command multiple UGVs simultaneously. This would
enable swarm technology or group behavior.
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BIOGRAPHY
Anupama. J. is a PG scholar of Er. PerumalManimekalai College of Engineering, Hosur, She has published 2
conference papers and has attended numerous workshops. Her areas of interest are robotics, autonomous ground
vehicles and micro air vehicles.