Thursday, April 24, 2014

Final report

Name: Michael Franck
Date: 04/13/2014
Course Title:   Applied Robotics
Number:   ETI 4880C
Schedule:  Kendall: W: 6:40PM-9:10 PM
Term:  2013-2 (Spring 2014)
Mapping Robot
The purpose
To build a mapping robot that goes through a maze and maps it out.

Function, Structure and design
The robot will move by a chassis with four wheels. The robot chassis will be powered by its on 7.4V LIPO battery. The robot movement will be controlled by the arduino. The arduino micro controller will power by an 11.1V LIPO battery. The arduino will tell the chassis where to move by the results from the ultra-sonic sensor. The robot uses three ultra sonic sensors. Two will be place on the right side of the chassis to detect if a wall on its right side and the other in the front to detect if a wall is in front of it.  The ultra-sonic sensor will keep the robot a certain distance from the walls. As the robot move, it will keep an equal distance from the side of the walls. When the robot detects a wall in front of it, it will make a left turn.  As it moves through the maze, it will record its movement. It will know that it is in or out of the maze once it detects a black line. Once it completes the maze, it will display a simple view of the routes in the maze on a LCD. From the display maze, the map can be shifted left, right, up, down, zoomed in or out from the push buttons on top of the robot. The 7th key is a zoom multiplier button when pressed, brings up a menu where to zoom multiplier can be set. The zoom multiplier is used to speed the zooming in or out.

Components
Arduino Mega 2560 micro controller
Ultra sonic sensor   x3
Line following sensor
Robot chassis with motor and encoder
Motor controller with encoder
Jumper wires
·         Male to male
·         Male to female
1K Resistors x8
Potentiometer
Graphic LCD
LIPO batteries
·         2 cell 7.4V, 4A, 25C
·         3 cell 11.1V, 1.5A, 20C
Bump sensor x2
Bread board x2
Push button (SPST) x7
Single and double sided tape

Result
Final design (for now) :
 
 
              
   
The above picture is a sample map that the robot created.
This is a video of it in action


Conclusion
This was an amazing challenge. I didn't have any hardware problems throughout this whole project, which gave me time to focus on the software. The cost for all the parts that I used on the robot may estimate to be around $200. Due to the fact I haven’t been able to make a big enough maze to show the true capabilities of my robot, for now the picture above will have to do (didn't really put much thought into building a large more complex maze  until the last minute…).




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