Publication | Closed Access
Experimental studies of swarm robotic chemical plume tracing using computational fluid dynamics simulations
30
Citations
30
References
2010
Year
Robotic SystemsEngineeringFluid MechanicsField RoboticsSwarm DynamicAutonomous SystemsSystems EngineeringModeling And SimulationMultirobot SystemChemical PlumeRoboticsTask PerformanceDistributed RoboticsComputer SciencePerformance MetricsMultiphase FlowMulti-robot TeamNetworked SwarmExperimental StudiesSwarm Robotics
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to describe a multi‐robot solution to the problem of chemical source localization, in which a team of inexpensive, simple vehicles with short‐range, low‐power sensing, communication, and processing capabilities trace a chemical plume to its source emitter Design/methodology/approach The source localization problem is analyzed using computational fluid dynamics simulations of airborne chemical plumes. The analysis is divided into two parts consisting of two large experiments each: the first part focuses on the issues of collaborative control, and the second part demonstrates how task performance is affected by the number of collaborating robots. Each experiment tests a key aspect of the problem, e.g. effects of obstacles, and defines performance metrics that help capture important characteristics of each solution. Findings The new empirical simulations confirmed previous theoretical predictions: a physics‐based approach is more effective than the biologically inspired methods in meeting the objectives of the plume‐tracing mission. This gain in performance is consistent across a variety of plume and environmental conditions. This work shows that high success rate can be achieved by robots using strictly local information and a fully decentralized, fault‐tolerant, and reactive control algorithm. Originality/value This is the first paper to compare a physics‐based approach against the leading alternatives for chemical plume tracing under a wide variety of fluid conditions and performance metrics. This is also the first presentation of the algorithms showing the specific mechanisms employed to achieve superior performance, including the underlying fluid and other physics principles and their numerical implementation, and the mechanisms that allow the practitioner to duplicate the outstanding performance of this approach under conditions of many robots navigating through obstacle‐dense environments.
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