F15: Autonomous Mobile

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Abstract

Tesla Motors just announced their own developed technology on the October 14, 2015 - Autopilot on all of their currently supporting vehicle Model S. Using some of the top-of-the-line industrial sensor - a forward radar, a forward-looking camera, 12 long-range ultrasonic sensors, and a high-precision digitally-controlled electric assist braking system, an automated driving capabilities luxury car is being delivered. All of those feedback modules were being involved differently in the autopilot system. With a similar concept on the self-driving capability model RC car, our team is going to deliver similar technology with the knowledge on different peripheral drivers.

Objectives & Introduction

This program is target to deliver a self-driving vehicle with GPS/compass module and bluetooth communication with Android. Obstacle avoidance will only be added if time is permitted. The below are the tasks we aim to deliver: Motor and Servo, GPS, Compass, and Bluetooth enable.

Team Members & Responsibilities

  • Kenneth Chiu
    • B.S. Computer Engineering
  • Yuyu Chen
    • B.S. Computer Engineering

Schedule

The point of the schedule is for readers to assess how to pace themselves if they are doing a similar project.

Week# Start Date End Date Task Status Completion Date
1 10/16/2015 10/22/2015 Idea confirm, order project parts Completed 10/22/2015
2 10/23/2015 10/29/2015 Start building Android App, connect motor controller, test motor & servo Completed 10/28/2015
3 10/30/2015 11/05/2015 Get Compass, GPS, and Bluetooth modules working (implement drivers to output raw data) Completed 11/05/2015
4 11/06/2015 11/12/2015 Calibrate Compass and Parse GPS data (get useful data) Completed 11/20/2015
5 11/13/2015 11/19/2015 Integrate Compass and GPS together (heading, bearing, distance) Completed 11/29/2015
6 11/20/2015 11/26/2015 Continue working on Integration of Compass and GPS algorithm Completed 11/29/2015
7 11/27/2015 12/03/2015 Integrate motor with Geographical unit Completed 11/29/2015
8 12/04/2015 12/10/2015 Test Autonomous car, work on Bluetooth integration Completed 12/16/2015
9 12/11/2015 12/17/2015 Test Autonomous car Completed 12/16/2015

Parts List & Cost

Qty Description Manufacturer Part Number Total Cost Links
1 SJ One Board [1] Preet SJ-one $80 http://www.socialledge.com/sjsu/index.php?title=SJ_One_Board
1 Traxxas Stampede: Monster Truck [2] Traxxas 36054-1 $199.95 http://www.amazon.com/Traxxas-36054-1-Stampede-Monster-Ready-To-Race/dp/B00OK3AJWW/ref=zg_bs_166587011_6
1 GPS Bee kit (with Mini Embedded Antenna) [3] Adafruit MTK3339 $39.95 http://www.adafruit.com/products/746
1 Triple Axis Compass Magnetometer Sensor Module [4] Adafruit HMC5883L $9.95 http://www.adafruit.com/products/1746
1 BTBee Pro Bluetooth XBee Wireless Module [5] ITEAD Studio BR010292 $14.99 https://www.bananarobotics.com/shop/BTBee-Pro-Bluetooth-XBee-Wireless-Module

Design & Implementation

The design section can go over your hardware and software design. Organize this section using sub-sections that go over your design and implementation.

car overview

Hardware Design

Discuss your hardware design here. Show detailed schematics, and the interface here.

Overall hardware component schematic

Hardware Components

Traxxas 36054-1 Stampede: Monster Truck
We choose this monster truck because of multiple reasons. Traxxas is a well-known brand name for a typical RC car. Their cars are very fast, durable, and high quality. Although the price might be a bit pricey, we don't have to worry about replacing broken parts or worn parts. This prototype was designed to be suitable for any kind of road conditions. You don't want to change another ride if you are by the beach or hills. Monster trucks are designed to be offroad and every conditions. The car might be a bit slow onroad but the speed is not our main concern at this moment. Most importantly, this car has 1 electronic motor, 1 ESC and 1 Servo. The reason for us to choose this model is because we can get to control the motor and servo separately so that a minor degree of turn can be made. The motor is to control the rear-wheel accelerate and decelerate. The servo is to provide us a control of the front wheel so the car can follow the optimal route.
carStructure motorServo

BTBee Pro Bluetooth XBee
We have tried couple bluetooth module in the market and this one is by far the best that we can get. This BTBee Pro is a serial port Bluetooth module which can be compatible with the shields with XBee sockets. SJ one board come with a xBee shield and this is a best experience that we can have. It's designed for Bluetooth wireless transfer. It can support Slave and Master mode although we are using it as Slave mode only. When it's plugged into xBee socket, it uses UART for transparent transmission. With the build-in AT command, we can change some default settings like the module address, module name, module mode, and baud rate.
BTBeePro

MTK3339 Ultimate GPS
The MTK3339 Ultimate GPS module from Adafruit was chosen because it provides us with more than enough functionalities. All we needed from the GPS module was the longitude and latitude from raw NMEA sentence. It provides an accuracy of 5-10 meters (or worse if indoors) with its 22 satellites transmitting data to the GPS module. An external antenna can be attached to improve accuracy. The GPS module can be interfaced to a micro controller through UART interface with a default baud rate of 9600. It can be powered on with 3.3V-5VDC, which can be provided from the SJOne board. It provides an LED indicator that blinks at about 1Hz while searching for satellites and blinks once every 15 seconds when a fix is found to conserve power. The GPS module will allow us to calculate the bearing and destination from its current GPS coordinate and the destination coordinate.
MTK3339 GPS Module

HMC5883L Triple Axis Compass Magnetometer
The HMC5883L Triple-axis Magnetometer module from Adafruit was chosen because it provides us with heading relative to magnetic north. Most importantly, it allows us to steer toward our destination. The magnetometer has 6 data registers that can be read from which contains the 8 bit MSB or LSB x,y,z coordinates. Although the z-axis is provided, it is not used but can be useful in future projects. The magnetometer sensor uses I2C interface to communicate with a microcontroller. It can be powered on with either 3V-5VDC. There is also a Ready pin that can be used to speed up reading the data registers.
HMC5883L Compass Module

Hardware Interface

In this section, you can describe how your hardware communicates, such as which BUSes used. You can discuss your driver implementation here, such that the Software Design section is isolated to talk about high level workings rather than inner working of your project.


Traxxas 36054-1 Stampede: Monster Truck
ken

void motorTask::resetAll(float val)
{
   //motor.set(val); // neutral 15
   servo.set(val); // center15
   return;
}
void motorTask::turnLeft(float val)
{
   servo.set(val); // left , 19.5 max
   return;
}
void motorTask::turnRight(float val)
{
   servo.set(val); //rights 10.5 max
   return;
}
void motorTask::motorForward(float val)
{
   motor.set(val); // 15% motor speed, 16.5
   return;
}
void motorTask::motorBackward(float val)
{
   motor.set(val); //13.5
   return;
}


BTBee Pro Bluetooth XBee
ken

extern float lati;
extern float longi;
bearing = computeBearing(latitude, longitude, lati, longi );
distance = computeDistance(latitude, longitude, lati, longi );

MTK3339 Ultimate GPS
The GPS module is powered on by a minimum of 3.3V and is interfaced over UART to send and receive data. The 3.3V output from the SJOne board is used to power the board and the ground pin is connected to the GND pin of the GPS. Since it is using UART interface, the TX pin from the GPS is connected to RX of the SJOne board and the RX pin of the GPS is connected to TX pin of SJOne board. Once properly connected, the baud rate is set to 9600Hz for it to properly communicate with the SJone board. The GPS will begin outputting raw NMEA sentences by using the gets() function. The raw NMEA sentence is then filtered out by sending a packet during initialization to filter out different formats of of the raw sentences and output only $GPRMC (Recommended minimum specific GPS/Transit data). Only the latitude and longitude from the parsed NMEA sentence was needed, therefore another parser was developed to grab only the latitude and longitude data by the tokenize() function. Using the longitude and latitude, the bearing and distance can be calculated.

      Example: $GPRMC,225446,A,4916.45,N,12311.12,W,000.5,054.7,191194,020.3,E*68
                       1     2    3    4    5     6    7    8      9     10  11 12
Number Raw form Description
1 225446 Time of fix 22:54:46 UTC
2 A Navigation receiver warning A = OK, V = warning
3 4916.45 Latitude 49 deg. 16.45 min
4 N North
5 12311.12 Longitude 123 deg. 11.12 min
6 W West
7 000.5 Speed over ground, Knots
8 054.7 Course Made Good, True
9 191194 Date of fix 19 November 1994
10 020.3 Magnetic variation 20.3 deg
11 E East
12 *68 mandatory checksum
    if (counter == 3)
       {/*convert the 3trd token latitude*/
           latTemp = atof(token);
           latTemp = convertFromNmeaSentenceToDecimalCoord(latTemp, "m"); //"m" for meridian
       }
       /*If 4th token == South multiply by -1*/
       if (counter == 4)
       {
           if (*token == 'S')
           {
               latTemp *= (-1);
           }
       }
       latitude = latTemp;
   bearing = atan2( sin(longDiff_rad)*cos(lat2_rad), cos(lat1_rad)*sin(lat2_rad)-sin(lat1_rad)*cos(lat2_rad)*cos(longDiff_rad))
   Distance formula:
   haversine formula: a = sin^2(latDiff_rad/2) + cos(lat1_rad) * cos(lat2_rad) * sin^2(longDiff_rad/2)
    formula: c = 2 *atan2(sqrt(a), sqrt(1-a))
    d = Radius of Earth * c

HMC5883L Triple Axis Compass Magnetometer
The compass module is powered on by a minimum of 3.3V and communicates with the SJone board via I2C interface. The compass module has 6 data registers which contains the 8 bits MSB or LSB x,y,z coordinates in 2's complemented form. The MSB and LSB values of each coordinate were combined together to provide useful data in order to calculate the heading. Only the x and y values were used to calculate the heading. The reason why the compass module is far away from other electronics is because the compass module is very sensitive to surrounding magnetic fields. Placing it away from the servo and motor increased the heading degree accuracy when comparing to compass apps from smartphones. The compass module needed to be calibrated to its environment due to the effects of hard iron and soft iron distortions. Only hard iron was taken into account because it is a constant value and is just an offset. The soft iron offset is ignored due to varying magnetic field in different environment. In the graph plot below, there is a huge difference in distortion which resulted in 30 degree error with the non-calibrated module. The calibrated module reduced the error to just 10 degrees.

  float heading = (float) atan2(float(y), (float(x))); // in radian
   if (heading < 0)
   {
       heading += (2 * M_PI);
       heading *= 180 / M_PI;
   }
   else
       heading *= 180 / M_PI;

noncalibrated graph hard iron calibrated graph

Software Design

Show your software design. For example, if you are designing an MP3 Player, show the tasks that you are using, and what they are doing at a high level. Do not show the details of the code. For example, do not show exact code, but you may show psuedocode and fragments of code. Keep in mind that you are showing DESIGN of your software, not the inner workings of it.


Motor ken

Bluetooth ken

Geographical Unit

Implementation

This section includes implementation, but again, not the details, just the high level. For example, you can list the steps it takes to communicate over a sensor, or the steps needed to write a page of memory onto SPI Flash. You can include sub-sections for each of your component implementation.

Testing & Technical Challenges

Describe the challenges of your project. What advise would you give yourself or someone else if your project can be started from scratch again? Make a smooth transition to testing section and described what it took to test your project.

Include sub-sections that list out a problem and solution, such as:

My Issue #1

Issue: Calibration of 3-axis magnetometer

Need to calibrate compass because center is not at origin. Huge error of 20-30 degrees. Hard iron cause shift in x,y axis. Soft iron distort shape of circle into an ellipse. Need to keep compass on a flat surface because a tilt will affect x,y values

Resolution:

Calibration was applied by subtracting the hard-iron offsets. Heading error reduced to range of 0-10 degrees. Ignoring soft-iron distortion because value is not constant and changes with location.

My Issue #2

Issue:

Resolution:

Conclusion

Conclude your project here. You can recap your testing and problems. You should address the "so what" part here to indicate what you ultimately learnt from this project. How has this project increased your knowledge?

Project Video

Motor and Servo: https://youtu.be/AdKw1G4GNOM

Motor and Servo (updated): https://youtu.be/y9YGl9JmKUU

Geographical Unit integration with motor (compass only): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N3GIjYgyP60

Self Driving Field Test 1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7_ALVbJFRE

Self Driving Field Test 2: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BRb-uHcNx4

Project Source Code

References

Acknowledgement

Android application: https://github.com/kennethchiu22/AndroBluetooth

Compass sensor: https://learn.adafruit.com/downloads/pdf/adafruit-hmc5883l-breakout-triple-axis-magnetometer-compass-sensor.pdf

Motor and Servo: http://www.socialledge.com/sjsu/index.php?title=SJ_One_Board#Motor_.26_Servo_Control

References

[1] http://www.socialledge.com/sjsu/images/d/de/2012SJOneBoardSchematic.pdf

[2] https://traxxas.com/sites/default/files/24054-36054-37054-OM-N-EN-R02_0.pdf

[3] http://www.adafruit.com/datasheets/GlobalTop-FGPMMOPA6H-Datasheet-V0A.pdf

[4] http://www.adafruit.com/datasheets/HMC5883L_3-Axis_Digital_Compass_IC.pdf

[5] ftp://imall.iteadstudio.com/Modules/IM121115002_BTBeepro/DS_IM121115002_BTBeepro.pdf

Grading Criteria

  • How well is Software & Hardware Design described?
  • How well can this report be used to reproduce this project?
  • Code Quality
  • Overall Report Quality:
    • Software Block Diagrams
    • Hardware Block Diagrams
      Schematic Quality
    • Quality of technical challenges and solutions adopted.