Tam Willy Nguyen, Laurent J. Catoire, Emanuele Garone
This paper focuses on the control of a cooperative system composed of an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) and an Unmanned Ground Vehicle (UGV) manipulating an object. The two units are subject to input saturations and collaborate to move the object to a desired pose characterized by its position and inclination. The dynamics are derived using the Euler–Lagrange method. A stabilizing control law is proposed where the UGV is tasked to deploy the object to a certain position whereas the UAV adjusts its inclination. In particular, a proportional–derivative control law is proposed for the UGV, and a cascade control is used for the UAV, where the inner loop controls the attitude of the UAV and the outer loop stabilizes the inclination of the object. The stability of the points of equilibrium is proven using small gain arguments. To ensure constraints satisfaction at all times, a reference governor unit is added to this stabilizing control law. Simulations and experimental results are provided to validate the effectiveness of the proposed control scheme.
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