Article 2018

A Distributed Control Approach to Formation Balancing and Maneuvering of Multiple Multirotor UAVs

{In this paper, we propose and experimentally verify a distributed formation control algorithm for a group of multirotor unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). The algorithm brings the whole group of UAVs simultaneously to a prescribed submanifold that determines the formation shape in an asymptotically stable fashion in two- and three-dimensional environments. The complete distributed control framework is implemented with the combination of a fast model predictive control method executed at 50 Hz on low-power computers onboard multirotor UAVs and validated via a series of hardware-in-the-loop simulations and real-robot experiments. The experiments are configured to study the control performance in various formation cases of arbitrary time-varying (e.g., expanding, shrinking, or moving) shapes. In the actual experiments, up to four multirotors have been implemented to form arbitrary triangular, rectangular, and circular shapes drawn by the operator via a human\textendashrobot interaction device. We also carry out hardware-in-the-loop simulations using up to six onboard computers to achieve spherical formations and a formation moving through obstacles.}

Author(s): Liu, Y and Montenbruck, JM and Zelazo, D and Odelga, M and Rajappa, S and Bülthoff, HH and Allgöwer, F and Zell, A
Journal: {IEEE Transactions on Robotics}
Volume: 34
Number (issue): 4
Pages: 870--882
Year: 2018
Publisher: IEEE
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1109/TRO.2018.2853606
Address: New York, NY
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@article{item_2637699,
  title = {{A Distributed Control Approach to Formation Balancing and Maneuvering of Multiple Multirotor UAVs}},
  journal = {{IEEE Transactions on Robotics}},
  abstract = {{In this paper, we propose and experimentally verify a distributed formation control algorithm for a group of multirotor unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). The algorithm brings the whole group of UAVs simultaneously to a prescribed submanifold that determines the formation shape in an asymptotically stable fashion in two- and three-dimensional environments. The complete distributed control framework is implemented with the combination of a fast model predictive control method executed at 50 Hz on low-power computers onboard multirotor UAVs and validated via a series of hardware-in-the-loop simulations and real-robot experiments. The experiments are configured to study the control performance in various formation cases of arbitrary time-varying (e.g., expanding, shrinking, or moving) shapes. In the actual experiments, up to four multirotors have been implemented to form arbitrary triangular, rectangular, and circular shapes drawn by the operator via a human\textendashrobot interaction device. We also carry out hardware-in-the-loop simulations using up to six onboard computers to achieve spherical formations and a formation moving through obstacles.}},
  volume = {34},
  number = {4},
  pages = {870--882},
  publisher = {IEEE},
  address = {New York, NY},
  year = {2018},
  slug = {item_2637699},
  author = {Liu, Y and Montenbruck, JM and Zelazo, D and Odelga, M and Rajappa, S and B\"ulthoff, HH and Allg\"ower, F and Zell, A}
}