A Control Architecture for Developing Reactive Hybrid Remotely Operated Underwater Vehicles
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Abstract
This article introduces a control architecture designed for the development of Hybrid
Remotely Operated Underwater Vehicles. The term ”Hybrid” characterizes Remotely Operated
systems capable of autonomously executing specific operations. The presented architecture maintains
teleoperation capabilities while enabling two fully autonomous applications. The approach emphasizes
the implementation of reactive navigation by exclusively utilizing data from a Mechanical
Scanned Imaging Sonar for control decisions. This mandates the control system to solely react to data
derived from the vehicle’s environment, without considering other positioning information or state
estimation. The study involves transforming a small-scale commercial Remotely Operated Underwater
Vehicle into a hybrid system without structural modifications, and details the development of an
intermediate Operational Control Layer responsible for sensor data processing and task execution
control. Two practical applications, inspired by tasks common in natural or open-water aquaculture
farms, are explored: one for conducting transects, facilitating monitoring and maintenance operations,
and another for navigating toward an object for inspection purposes. Experimental results validate
the feasibility and effectiveness of the authors’ hypotheses. This approach expands the potential
applications of underwater vehicles and facilitates the development of Hybrid Remotely Operated
Underwater Vehicles, enabling the execution of autonomous reactive tasks.
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Bibliographic citation
Gómez-Bravo, F., Garrocho-Cruz, A., Marín-Cañas, O., Pulido-Calvo, I., Gutiérrez-Estrada, J.C., Peregrín-Rubio, A. 2024. A control architecture for developing reactive hybrid remotely operated underwater vehicles. Machines 12(1), 1 https://doi.org/10.3390/machines12010001














