Brasil
| Trabalho de Conclusão de Curso de Graduação
Esterçamento automático e controle de velocidade de veículos agrícolas com simulações em tempo real
Fecha
2020-09-18Registro en:
ZART, J. C. I. G. Esterçamento automático e controle de velocidade de veículos agrícolas com simulações em tempo real. 2020. 119 p. Trabalho de Conclusão de Curso (Graduação em Engenharia Aeroespacial)- Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, RS, 2020.
Autor
Zart, José Carlos Ignacio Gonçalves
Institución
Resumen
In this work, an automatic steering and velocity control is designed for an agricultural tractor
to improve agricultural efficiency due to the following reasons: to avoid missing or overlap
between two adjacent tracks and to keep a constant velocity during operation. The vehicle
is firstly modeled in Vortex Studio, which is a physics-based simulation software that uses
multibody dynamics combined with several models, such as tire models, to compute the
physical quantities. The Bekker soft ground tire model, which capture the non-linear friction
behaviour and rolling resistance resulting from wheels sinking into the ground, is used to
compute the tire forces. Then, a simplified mathematical model, based on the rigid body
equations of motion, is developed. For the longitudinal dynamics the mathematical model
is build based on system identification. Therefore, the mathematical model is compared
with the Vortex Studio model and the compatibility is verified. Later, the simplified models
are linearized and an analysis of the open-loop stability is performed. Based on this, the
control requirements of performance are specified and a phase lead compensator with an
integrator is designed for the automatic steering system. For the automatic velocity control
a Proportional-Integral-Derivative (PID) compensator is used. The control system design is
done based on a modern control technique, which determine the optimal feedback gains
based on a linear quadratic formulation of the tracker problem. In the sequence, the performance
requirements are verified based on the step response and the closed-loop stability is
analyzed in terms of the disk margins for both control systems. Also, the Lookahead-Based
Line of Sight Steering algorithm is implemented to generate the appropriate reference signal
to the steering control system. Finally, Software-In-the-Loop (SIL) simulations are performed
to verify the stability margins and to analyze the control system performance in the
presence of noise, model uncertainties and terrain variations.