Difference between revisions of "S24: Team TerraByte"

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(GPS Module)
(Geographical Controller)
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== Geographical Controller ==
 
== Geographical Controller ==
<Picture and link to Gitlab>
 
  
 
The geo controller has a dedicated SJ2 board attached to the CAN bus via a transceiver. The main task of the geo controller is to provide the driver node with directions to the destination location.
 
The geo controller has a dedicated SJ2 board attached to the CAN bus via a transceiver. The main task of the geo controller is to provide the driver node with directions to the destination location.

Revision as of 01:19, 25 May 2024

Title

TerraByte


Abstract

<2-3 sentence abstract>

Introduction

The project is divided into 5 modules:

  • Sensor Node
  • Motor Node
  • Driver Node
  • Geo Controller Node
  • Android App

Team Members & Responsibilities

Terrabyte group.png

Gitlab Project Link - C243_TerraByte

Module Owner Supporter
Sensor + Bridge Vamsi Rushi Dhanekula -
Driver + LCD Minal Upadhye Susmitha
Motor + ESC Susmitha Ganesh Minal
GPS + Geo Controller Harikrishnan Kokkanthara Jeevan -
App Dikshant Kotla Vamsi
  • Android Application
    • Link to Gitlab user1


Schedule

Week# Start Date End Date Task Status
1 03/04/2024 03/10/2024
  • Read previous projects, gather information and discuss among the group members.
  • Order CAN transceiver modules.
Completed
2 03/04/2024 03/10/2024
  • Understand and learn to use the Busmaster.
  • Build db9 connector and connect to Busmaster.
  • Distribute modules to each team member.
Completed
3 03/11/2024 03/17/2024
  • Finalize and acquire sensors and RC car parts.
  • acquire LCD display
  • Create initial dbc
Completed
4 03/18/2024 03/24/2024
  • Get Data from Ultrasonic Sensors
  • Get co-ordinates from GPS module
  • Get motors working
  • Display LCD module
  • Interface Compass(LSM303)
  • Interface Bluetooth
  • Explore plug-and-play mounting of sensors and SJ2 boards.
Completed
5 03/25/2024 03/31/2024
  • Build on DBC and finalize message IDs
  • Develop GPS Module with Geo controller
  • Develop motor Module with motor Controller
  • Develop ultrasonic sensor module with sensor Controller
  • Develop LCD and driver module
Completed
6 04/01/2024 04/07/2024

PROTOTYPE 1

  • Connect sensor-driver-motor modules
  • Assemble hardware
  • Basic setup integration tests
  • Basic mobile app setup
Completed
7 04/08/2024 04/14/2024
  • Integrate Geo/GPS module with connected hardware
  • Motors with PID control
  • Obstacle avoidance
  • Finalize plug-and-play design
Completed
8 04/15/2024 04/21/2024

PROTOTYPE 2

  • Start with the mobile app
  • Integrate Bluetooth module with app
  • Fine-tune obstacle avoidance
Completed
9 04/22/2024 04/28/2024
  • Advanced integration testing
  • Indoor testing
Completed
10 04/29/2024 05/05/2024

PROTOTYPE 3

  • Prepare for outdoor tests.
Completed
11 05/06/2024 05/12/2024

PROTOTYPE 4

  • Perform outdoor tests and recalibrate.
Completed
12 05/13/2024 05/19/2024
  • Final Demo
Completed


Parts List & Cost

Item# Part Desciption Vendor Qty Cost
1 RC Car - Traxxas Slash 2Wd BL Traxxas [1] 1 $260.00
2 SJ2 boards CMPE SCE 4 $50.00 each
3 CAN Transceivers Adafruit [2] 4 $3.95 each
4 LCD module 20*4 GeekPi [3] 1 $0.00
5 Bluetooth module Adafruit [4] 1 $0.00
6 Ultrasonic Sensors Adafruit [5] 4 $0.00
7 GPS module Adafruit [6] 1 $0.00
8 Compass Adafruit [7] 1 $0.00
9 GPS Antenna  ? 1 $0.00
10 RPM Sensors - 1 $12.00
xx DB9 connector female Amazon [8] 1 $9.99
xx Jumper wires Amazon [9] 2 $6.98 each
xx Bread boards Amazon [] 2 $0.00 each


Printed Circuit Board

<Picture and information, including links to your PCB>



CAN Communication

<Talk about your message IDs or communication strategy, such as periodic transmission, MIA management etc.>

Hardware Design

<Show your CAN bus hardware design>

DBC File

Gitlab link to your DBC file -- https://gitlab.com/minalupadhye/C243_terrabyte/-/blob/master/dbc/project.dbc?ref_type=heads



Sensor Controller & Bridge

<Picture and link to Gitlab>

Hardware Design

Software Design

<List the code modules that are being called periodically.>

Technical Challenges

< List of problems and their detailed resolutions>



Driver Controller & LCD

<Picture and link to Gitlab>

Hardware Design

The SJ2 board hosting the driver module is connected to -

  • CAN bus :
  • LCD on I2C :
  • Sensor LEDs :


Software Design

Driver module has 2 main objectives

  • Process the input from sensor and geo module and provide control output to motor module.
  • Display important information on the LCD.

Driver_logic() is the core part which manages the entire module.

Receive Handling/Data Processing
void periodic_callbacks__10Hz(uint32_t callback_count) {
  gpio__toggle(board_io__get_led1());
  can_bus_handler__process_all_received_messages();
  can_bus_handler__transmit_messages();
  driver_mia__manage_mia(10);
}

Technical Challenges

< List of problems and their detailed resolutions>



Motor Controller

Hardware Design

The motor controller, is the SJ2 board linked to powertrain, wheel encoder and CAN transceiver, which manages the motor's operation. It follows the direction and speed instructions provided by the Driver module. Additionally, it measures the wheel speed and maintains the preset speed across different terrains. This wheel speed data is transmitted to the Sensor-Bridge module for display on the Android App.


Powertrain

We used Traaxas Slash XL5 RWD for this project. The ESC (XL-5), BLDC motor, servo motor and battery come with the RC car. The 6V 3000mAh NiMH battery powers the ESC (XL-5), servo and BLDC motor. The ESC controls the BLDC however the servo is not connected via the ESC. The BLDC controls the forward, reverse and brake motion of the car along with the respective speed in the forward and reverse direction. The servo controls the steer angle. Brake and speed in both forward and reverse in case of BLDC motor and steer angle in case of Servo motor are controlled by PWM signals.
The ESC operates in 3 different modes as per the user manual, we choose to operate the car in Training mode where the forward and reverse speeds are half its original speeds. The maximum speed the car could reach is around 30Kmph in this mode. This mode can be set by long pressing the button on the ESC and releasing the button when there are 3 consecutive red blinks.
For the RC car the PWM signals are provided by the Radio Transmitter + Remote. We tried to understand the sequence of PWM that is to be provided to keep the ESC calibrated, for forward, reverse and brake by providing the commands on the remote and checking the waveform on oscilloscope.
Understanding PWM Sequence.png


The following were our observations which helped us develop motor control module:

STATE PWM COMMENTS
ESC Calibration 15%
  • ESC is calibrated – Solid red LED
  • ESC out of calibration - Blinking green LED
Forward 15.1% to 20% Speed increases with the PWM dutycycle
Brake
  • Hard brake: PWM < 15% followed by 15%.
  • Soft brake: 15%.
Reverse 10% to 14.9% Speed increases with the decrease in PWM dutycycle
Right 15.1% to 20% Angle increases with the PWM dutycycle
Left 10% to 14.9% Angle increases with decrease in PWM dutycycle
No steer 15%

Wheel Encoder

We opted reed switch for wheel encoding.
Placement : The magnet, along with its holder, was positioned on the spur gear, while the reed switch was housed within the casing covering the spur gear. The reed switch is connected between GPIO pin and ground. (NOTE: All GPIO pins of SJ2 board are pulled up to 3.3 V).
The reed switch is usually open (giving a 3.3V when observed on oscilloscope) but when it crosses the magnet the reed switch closes giving a 0V. The number of edge falls in a minute gives the rpm. This is converted into linear speed by considering the circumference of wheel and gear to wheel ratio (since the wheel encoder was placed in the spur gear every 2.73 rotations of spur gear yields 1 rotation of wheel). SpurGear Terrabyte.png Traaxas sensor.png

Software Design

<List the code modules that are being called periodically.>

Technical Challenges

< List of problems and their detailed resolutions>



Geographical Controller

The geo controller has a dedicated SJ2 board attached to the CAN bus via a transceiver. The main task of the geo controller is to provide the driver node with directions to the destination location.

The geo node is attached with GPS and compass modules for this task.

Hardware Design

GPS Module

The GPS module used is an Adafruit Breakout V3, PA1616S

GPS TerraByte.jpg Cmps cropped TerraByte.jpg

  • It is a UART-based module that runs at 9600bps by default and can be configured up to 115200bps.
  • It is attached to the SJ2 board on UART3 on pins P4.28(TX3) and P4.29(RX3).
  • The TX is connected to the RX of the GPS and the RX pin is connected to the TX of the GPS.
  • The GPS module outputs various NMEA strings like $GPGLL, $GPGSA etc… out of which we are concerned with only 1 type of string which is the $GPGGA - Global Positioning Systems Fix Data.
  • Once the GPS gets a fix, the fix LED on the module will start blinking every 15 seconds.


The $GPGGA string is of the format:

  • $GPGGA,HHMMSS.SS,DDMM.MMMMM,K,DDDMM.MMMMM,L,N,QQ,PP.P,AAAA.AA,M,±XX.XX,M, SSS,RRRR*CC<CR><LF>


Name Example Description
Message ID $GPGGA GGA protocol header
UTC Time 002153.000 hhmmss.sss
Latitude 3342.6618 dddmm.mmmm
N/S indicator N North or South Indicator
Longitude 11751.3858 dddmm.mmmm
E/W Indicator W East or West Indicator
Position Fix Indicator 1 Indicates if there is a satellite fix
Satellite Used 10 Range 0 to 12
HDOP 1.2 Horizontal Dilution of Precision
MSL Altitude 27.0
Units M
Geoid Separation -34.2 Geoid-to-ellipsoid separation. Ellipsoid altitude = MSL Altitude + Geoid Separation
Units M
Age of Diff. Corr. Null fields when DGPS is not used
Diff. Ref. Station ID 000
Checksum *5E
<CR><LF> End of Message termination
  • We are interested in the Message ID, latitude, N/S indicator, Longitude, E/W Indicator, and Position Fix Indicator, which the parsing algorithm will parse from the line buffer.
  • The output will be the current location in terms of latitude and longitude of the format (3342.6618, 11751.3858).

Compass

Important Note to future students: Under no circumstances buy a compass that you have to manually calibrate like the LSM303AGR or LSM303DLHC (see technical challenges for more information)


  • The compass module used is a CMPS12 from Bosch. It was chosen because it works out of the box, is tilt-calibrated, and does not require any additional calibration to account for the magnetic declination, soft iron, and hard iron offsets.

CMPS12 Terrabyte.png


  • The compass is interfaced to the SJ2 board using the I2C_2 pins P0.10 (SDA) and P0.11 (SCL) respectively.

Software Design

Initialization Phase

  • The GPS module can and should be configured to only output GPGGA strings during the initialization phase of the scheduler. This makes it easier to have a smaller line buffer and less overhead
  • The command used: "$PMTK314,0,0,0,1,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0*29\r\n"
  • Apart from this, the GPS module along with the SJ2 UART should be raised to 115200bps to get the best possible speed when running the GPS_run_once() function at 20hz. However, we found that raising the speed to 115200 was not working. See the technical challenges section for more details.
  • Very little configuration during the initialization phase is required to start getting the heading values from the compass in fact, if you are using I2C_2 by default I2C is initialized with 400khz and you don’t need to do any setup.


Main Loop

  • The geo controller's main task is to send a status message ‘GEO_STATUS’ to the driver node. This frame contains details like the heading, bearing, distance to destination, and some flags to help the car reach the destination.
  • All function calls CAN receive, CAN send and gps_run_once are called in 20hz frequency.
  • gps_run_once() function call fetches the latest NMEA GPGGA string from the line buffer and parses it to extract the latitude and longitude along with GPS fix data. On successful parsing of the string, a debug flag is also set. If the parsing was successful and a fix was present an LED on the SJ2 board was lit up.
  • The destination to which the car has to reach set from the Android app is sent by the SENSOR_BRIDGE module via CAN.
  • Once the destination co-ordinate has been received the bearing and distance to the destination are computed.
  • To compute the bearing we use both coordinates the current location received from the GPS module and the destination location received from the SENSOR_BRIDGE node. The values are fed into the below formula and converted into degrees from radians.


Bearing formula TerraByte.png

  • To compute the distance to the destination the haversine formula is used and output is formatted into meters for better accuracy. If the distance is less than 3m a flag is set once to indicate that the final destination is reached. More on this in the technical challenges section.


Distance formula TerraByte.png

  • To compute the heading the geo_status() function simply fetches the latest values from the compass and applies the constants described in the datasheet.
  • Once all this data is computed the ‘GEO_STAUS’ message is populated and then sent to the driver node in the CAN transmission function call.
  • A message bank module was adopted where all messages to be sent and received from the CAN are processed.


Appendix GEO

Parsing Algorithm

static bool gps__parse_coordinates_from_line(void) {
 char gps_line[200];
 bool return_value = false;
 uint8_t field_count = 0;


 if (line_buffer__remove_line(&line, gps_line, sizeof(gps_line))) {
    // set co-ordinate as invalid initially and gps-fix to false
   parsed_coordinates.valid = false;
   gps_fix = false;


   // copy to reparse
   char gps_line_copy[200];
   strncpy(gps_line_copy, gps_line, sizeof(gps_line_copy));


   // parse and get the preamble
   char *token = strtok(gps_line_copy, ",");
   field_count++;


   // Check if the line is a GPGGA sentence
   if (token && strcmp(token, "$GPGGA") == 0) {
     // Skip the time field which is the second token
     char *time = strtok(NULL, ",");
     field_count++;


     // skip other fields to first check fix
     for (int i = 0; i < 5; ++i) {
       token = strtok(NULL, ",");
       field_count++;


       if (token == NULL) {
         return_value = false;
         break;
       }
     }


     if (token && field_count == 7) {
       int fix_quality = atoi(token);
       if (fix_quality > 0) {
         gps_fix = true;
         turn_on_gps_fix_led();
         // GPS fix, parse latitiude and longititude
         // Re-parse the original line for latitude and longitude
         strtok(gps_line, ","); // skip $GPGGA
         strtok(NULL, ",");     // skip Time
         char *latitude = strtok(NULL, ",");
         char *latitude_direction = strtok(NULL, ",");
         char *longitude = strtok(NULL, ",");
         char *longitude_direction = strtok(NULL, ",");


         if (latitude && longitude && latitude_direction && longitude_direction) {
           // Convert and adjust coordinates
           float parsed_latitude = convert_from_minutes_to_decimal(atof(latitude));
           float parsed_longitude = convert_from_minutes_to_decimal(atof(longitude));


           if (*latitude_direction == 'S') {
             parsed_latitude *= -1.0f;
           }
           if (*longitude_direction == 'W') {
             parsed_longitude *= -1.0f;
           }


           parsed_coordinates.latitude = parsed_latitude;
           parsed_coordinates.longitude = parsed_longitude;
           parsed_coordinates.valid = true;
           return_value = true;
         } else {
      
           return_value = false;
         }
       } else {
         turn_off_gps_fix_led();
         gps_fix = false;
         return_value = false;
       }
     }
   } else {
     return_value = false;
   }
 } else {
   return_value = false;
 }


 return return_value;
}


Periodic scheduler callbacks 20hz

void periodic_callbacks__100Hz(uint32_t callback_count) {


 if (callback_count % 5 == 0) {
   msg_bank__handle_msg_rx();
   msg_bank_geo__service_mia_10hz();
   gps__run_once();
   msg_bank__handle_msg_tx();
 }
}

Geo_status function

void geo_get_status_2(dbc_GEO_STATUS_s *msg) {
 float distance = 0.0f;
 uint16_t bearing = 0;
 uint16_t heading = 0;
 float haversine_angle = 0.0f;


 gps_coordinates_t gps_current_reading = gps__get_coordinates();
 bool geo_current_valid = gps_current_reading.valid;
 bool geo_dest_valid = geo_get_destination_coordinates();


 if (geo_current_valid) {
   if (geo_dest_valid) {
     // Always calculate distance to final destination for the flag logic
     haversine_angle = helper_find_haversine_angle(gps_current_reading, gps_destination);
     distance_to_final_destination = find_distance(haversine_angle);
     bearing = find_bearing(gps_current_reading, gps_destination);


#ifdef CHECKPOINT_ALGORITHM
     // If using checkpoints, calculate nearest checkpoint and get distance to it for navigation
     gps_coordinates_t nearest_checkpoint =
         find_nearest_checkpoint(gps_destination, gps_current_reading, distance_to_final_destination);
     haversine_angle = helper_find_haversine_angle(gps_current_reading, nearest_checkpoint);
     distance = find_distance(haversine_angle);
     bearing = find_bearing(gps_current_reading, nearest_checkpoint);
#else
     // Not using checkpoints, use direct distance and bearing already calculated
     distance = distance_to_final_destination;
#endif
   } else {
     // Use the last known good destination if new coordinates are invalid
     haversine_angle = helper_find_haversine_angle(gps_current_reading, gps_destination);
     distance_to_final_destination = find_distance(haversine_angle);
     distance = distance_to_final_destination;
     bearing = find_bearing(gps_current_reading, gps_destination);
   }


   // Check if the final destination is reached
   if (distance_to_final_destination <= 1.5f) {
     distace_zero_true = true;
     turn_on_SJ2_LED_for_final_destination_reached();
   }
 }


 heading = compass2__get_heading();


 // Set message signals
 msg->GEO_STATUS_DISTANCE_TO_DESTINATION = distance_to_final_destination;
 msg->GEO_STATUS_COMPASS_HEADING = heading;
 msg->GEO_STATUS_COMPASS_BEARING = bearing;
 msg->GEO_STATUS_VALID_FLAG = geo_current_valid | geo_dest_valid;
 msg->GEO_STATUS_DESTINATION_REACHED = distace_zero_true;
}

Compass Data reading function

bool static compass2__read_once_magnetometer_data(void) {
 const uint8_t COMPASS_HEADING_BYTES = 2;
 uint8_t received_raw_data[2] = {0};
 compass_heartbeat = false;


 compass_heartbeat = i2c__read_slave_data(i2c_bus_port_compass, CMPS12_ADDRESS, CMPS12_BOSCH_ANGLE_BNO055,
                                          received_raw_data, COMPASS_HEADING_BYTES);


 if (compass_heartbeat) {
   compass_heading_degrees = ((float)(((uint16_t)received_raw_data[0] << 8) | ((uint16_t)received_raw_data[1]))) /
                             CMPS12_BOSCH_SCALING_FACTOR;
 }


 return compass_heartbeat;
}

Technical Challenges

The GPS module is a critical part of the RC car and has to be unit-tested and integration-tested (both tests are important equally for this node)

  • If you are reading this then go ahead and order the CMPS12 or CMPS14 compass they are costlier but work out of the box and the code is way smaller and easier to work with. We initially bought the LSM303AGR but it gave us so many issues even after spending days to calibrate it.


  • Problem: The command to set the GPS module to output only GPGGA strings was not working correctly.
    • Cause: The UART peripheral takes time to get initialized.
    • Solution: Add a delay after the UART init call is made in the periodic initialization before sending the config command.
  • Problem: Unable to switch to the higher baud rates
    • Cause: Memory allocation with the line buffer
    • Solution: keep the baud rate as 9600 itself. Although this works, ideally it should be higher for the 20hz function.
  • Problem: The parsing function was not working properly
    • Cause: Without a fix, there will be empty values in the NMEA string, the algorithm did not account for this.
    • Solution: make sure to include the GPS fix parameter in the algorithm to check if the NMEA string is complete.
  • Problem: Once the car reaches its destination and the distance to the destination becomes 0, after some time the distance will suddenly increase and the car will start moving again.
    • Cause: This is the nature of the GPS module, it keeps updating the coordinate with less precision due to math with floating point.
    • Solution: Once the destination becomes 0 a flag is set once and never reset again. This flag is also sent to the driver to indicate that the destination has been reached and the car should not move again even though the distance is changing.




Master Module

<Picture and link to Gitlab>

Hardware Design

Software Design

<List the code modules that are being called periodically.>

Technical Challenges

< List of problems and their detailed resolutions>



Mobile Application

<Picture and link to Gitlab>

Hardware Design

Software Design

<List the code modules that are being called periodically.>

Technical Challenges

< List of problems and their detailed resolutions>






Conclusion

<Organized summary of the project>

<What did you learn?>

Project Video

Project Source Code

Advise for Future Students

<Bullet points and discussion>

Acknowledgement

=== References ===