A Hybrid Systems-based Hierarchical Control Architecture for Heterogeneous Field Robot Teams
Chanyoung Ju, Hyoung Il Son

TL;DR
This paper introduces a hybrid systems-based hierarchical control architecture for heterogeneous field robot teams, combining high-level supervisory control with low-level traditional control, validated through simulation to improve coordination and scalability.
Contribution
It proposes a novel hybrid systems and hierarchical control framework using hybrid automata and a modular supervisor for heterogeneous robot cooperation.
Findings
Successfully implemented and validated the control architecture in a physics-based simulator.
Demonstrated that the robot team met specified cooperation objectives.
Confirmed the efficiency and scalability of the proposed control approach.
Abstract
Field robot systems have recently been applied to a wide range of research fields. Making such systems more automated, advanced, and activated requires cooperation among heterogeneous robots. Classic control theory is inefficient in managing large-scale complex dynamic systems. Therefore, the supervisory control theory based on discrete event system needs to be introduced to overcome this limitation. In this study, we propose a hybrid systems-based hierarchical control architecture through a supervisory control-based high-level controller and a traditional control-based low-level controller. The hybrid systems and its dynamics are modeled through a formal method called hybrid automata, and the behavior specifications expressing the control objectives for cooperation are designed. Additionally, a modular supervisor that is more scalable and maintainable than a centralized supervisory…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPetri Nets in System Modeling · Distributed systems and fault tolerance · Modular Robots and Swarm Intelligence
