Abstract:In this letter, Lyapunov-based synthesis of a PI-like controller is proposed for $\mathcal{L}_2$-stable motion control of an independently driven and steered four-wheel mobile robot. An explicit, structurally verified model is used to enable systematic controller design with stability and performance guarantees suitable for real-time operation. A Lyapunov function is constructed to yield explicit bounds and $\mathcal{L}_2$ stability results, supporting feedback synthesis that reduces configuration dependent effects. The resulting control law maintains a PI-like form suitable for standard embedded implementation while preserving rigorous stability properties. Effectiveness and robustness are demonstrated experimentally on a real four-wheel mobile robot platform.
Abstract:This paper presents the design of a pose estimator for a four wheel independent steer four wheel independent drive (4WIS4WID) wall climbing mobile robot, based on the fusion of multimodal measurements, including wheel odometry, visual odometry, and an inertial measurement unit (IMU) data using Extended Kalman Filter (EKF) and Unscented Kalman Filter (UKF). The pose estimator is a critical component of wall climbing mobile robots, as their operational environment involves carrying precise measurement equipment and maintenance tools in construction, requiring information about pose on the building at the time of measurement. Due to the complex geometry and material properties of building facades, the use of traditional localization sensors such as laser, ultrasonic, or radar is often infeasible for wall-climbing robots. Moreover, GPS-based localization is generally unreliable in these environments because of signal degradation caused by reinforced concrete and electromagnetic interference. Consequently, robot odometry remains the primary source of velocity and position information, despite being susceptible to drift caused by both systematic and non-systematic errors. The calibrations of the robot's systematic parameters were conducted using nonlinear optimization and Levenberg-Marquardt methods as Newton-Gauss and gradient-based model fitting methods, while Genetic algorithm and Particle swarm were used as stochastic-based methods for kinematic parameter calibration. Performance and results of the calibration methods and pose estimators were validated in detail with experiments on the experimental mobile wall climbing robot.




Abstract:Design usually relies on human ingenuity, but the past decade has seen the field's toolbox expanding to Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its adjacent methods, making room for hybrid, algorithmic creations. This article aims to substantiate the concept of interspecies collaboration - that of natural and artificial intelligence - in the active co-creation of a visual identity, describing a case study of the Regional Center of Excellence for Robotic Technology (CRTA) which opened on 750 m2 in June 2021 within the University of Zagreb. The visual identity of the Center comprises three separately devised elements, each representative of the human-AI relationship and embedded in the institution's logo. Firstly, the letter "C" (from the CRTA acronym) was created using a Gaussian Mixture Model (GMM) applied to (x, y) coordinates that the neurosurgical robot RONNA, CRTA's flagship innovation, generated when hand-guided by a human operator. The second shape of the letter "C" was created by using the same (x, y) coordinates as inputs fed to a neural network whose goal was to output letters in a novel, AI-generated typography. A basic feedforward back-propagating neural network with two hidden layers was chosen for the task. The final and third design element was a trajectory the robot RONNA makes when performing a brain biopsy. As CRTA embodies a state-of-the-art venue for robotics research, the 'interspecies' approach was used to accentuate the importance of human-robot collaboration which is at the core of the newly opened Center, illustrating the potential of reciprocal and amicable relationship that humans could have with technology.