A cooperative project between the Universities of Plymouth and Cranfield was aimed
at designing and developing an autonomous underwater vehicle named Hammerhead.
The work presented herein is to formulate an advance guidance and control system
and to implement it in the Hammerhead. This involves the description of Hammerhead
hardware from a control system perspective. In addition to the control system,
an intelligent navigation scheme and a state of the art vision system is also developed.
However, the development of these submodules is out of the scope of this thesis.
To model an underwater vehicle, the traditional way is to acquire painstaking mathematical
models based on laws of physics and then simplify and linearise the models to
some operating point. One of the principal novelties of this research is the use of system
identification techniques on actual vehicle data obtained from full scale in water
experiments. Two new guidance mechanisms have also been formulated for cruising
type vehicles. The first is a modification of the proportional navigation guidance for
missiles whilst the other is a hybrid law which is a combination of several guidance
strategies employed during different phases of the Right.
In addition to the modelling process and guidance systems, a number of robust control
methodologies have been conceived for Hammerhead. A discrete time linear
quadratic Gaussian with loop transfer recovery based autopilot is formulated and integrated
with the conventional and more advance guidance laws proposed. A model
predictive controller (MPC) has also been devised which is constructed using artificial
intelligence techniques such as genetic algorithms (GA) and fuzzy logic. A GA
is employed as an online optimization routine whilst fuzzy logic has been exploited
as an objective function in an MPC framework. The GA-MPC autopilot has been
implemented in Hammerhead in real time and results demonstrate excellent robustness
despite the presence of disturbances and ever present modelling uncertainty. To
the author's knowledge, this is the first successful application of a GA in real time
optimization for controller tuning in the marine sector and thus the thesis makes an
extremely novel and useful contribution to control system design in general. The
controllers are also integrated with the proposed guidance laws and is also considered
to be an invaluable contribution to knowledge. Moreover, the autopilots are used in
conjunction with a vision based altitude information sensor and simulation results
demonstrate the efficacy of the controllers to cope with uncertain altitude demands.
Date of Award | 2004 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Robert Sutton (Director of Studies (First Supervisor)) & John Chudley (Other Supervisor) |
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Guidance and control of an autonomous underwater vehicle
Naeem, W. (Author). 2004
Student thesis: PhD