Differential wheeled robot

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A three-wheeled differentially steered robot

A differential wheeled robot is a mobile robot whose movement is based on two separately driven wheels placed on either side of the robot body. It can thus change its direction by varying the relative rate of rotation of its wheels and hence does not require an additional steering motion. Robots with such a drive typically have one or more castor wheels to prevent the vehicle from tilting.[1]

Details[edit]

Path of wheels through a turn. The wheels are not connected, despite how it appears.

If both the wheels are driven in the same direction and speed, the robot will go in a straight line. If both wheels are turned with equal speed in opposite directions, as is clear from the diagram shown, the robot will rotate about the central point of the axis. Otherwise, depending on the speed of rotation and its direction, the center of rotation may fall anywhere on the line defined by the two contact points of the tires. While the robot is traveling in a straight line, the center of rotation is an infinite distance from the robot. Since the direction of the robot is dependent on the rate and direction of rotation of the two driven wheels, these quantities should be sensed and controlled precisely.

A differentially steered robot is similar to the differential gears used in automobiles in that both the wheels can have different rates of rotations, but unlike the differential gearing system, a differentially steered system will have both the wheels powered. Differential wheeled robots are used extensively in robotics, since their motion is easy to program and can be well controlled. Virtually all consumer robots on the market today use differential steering primarily for its low cost and simplicity. [citation needed]

Kinematics of Differential Drive Robots[edit]

Differential Drive Kinematics

The illustration on the right shows the differential drive kinematics of a mobile wheeled robot. The variables are expressed using the following notation: and are the global coordinate system. Using the point midway between the wheels as the origin of the robot, one can define and as the locale body coordinate system. The orientation of the robot with respect to the global coordinate system is the angle . The radius of the wheels is and the width of the vehicle . Assuming that the wheels are at any time in contact with the ground (there is no slip), the wheels describe arcs in the plane in such a way that the vehicle always rotates around a point (referred to as ⁣ - instantaneous center of rotation). The ground contact speed of the left wheel and the right wheel lead to a rotation of the vehicle by the angular velocity . Following the definition of angular velocity, one obtains:

Solving these two equations for and , while the latter is defined as the distance from to the center of the robot
Using the equation for the angular velocity, the instantaneous velocity of the point midway between the robot's wheels is given by
The wheel tangential velocities can also be written as
where and are the left and the right angular velocities of the wheels around their axes. The robot kinematics in local body coordinates can thus be written as
Using a coordinate transformation (Rotation of axes), the robot's kinematic model in global coordinates can finally be obtained
where and are the control variables.[1][2]

Differential Drive Controller[edit]

One might face a situation where the velocity and the angular velocity are given as inputs, and the angular velocities of the left and right wheels are sought as control variables (see figure above). In this case, the already mentioned equation can be easily reformulated. Using the relations and in

one obtains the equation for the angular velocity of the right wheel

The same procedure can be applied to the calculation of the angular velocity of the left wheel

Examples of differential wheeled robots[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Wheeled mobile robotics : from fundamentals towards autonomous systems. Gregor Klančar, Andrej Zdešar, Sašo Blažič, Igor Škrjanc. Oxford. 2017. ISBN 978-0-12-804238-0. OCLC 971588275.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ Springer handbook of robotics. Bruno Siciliano, Oussama Khatib. Berlin: Springer. 2008. ISBN 978-3-540-30301-5. OCLC 272306791.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ "Shonkbot!". Bristol Hackspace.

External links[edit]