scholarly journals DroneTank: Planning UAVs’ Flights and Sensors’ Data Transmission under Energy Constraints

Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (9) ◽  
pp. 2913 ◽  
Author(s):  
Runqun Xiong ◽  
Feng Shan

We consider an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV, also known as drone) as an aerial sink to travel along a natural landscape or rural industrial linear infrastructure to collect data from deployed sensors. We study a joint schedule problem that involves flight planning for the drone and transmission scheduling for sensors, such that the maximum amount of data can be collected with a limited individual energy budget for the UAV and the sensors, respectively. On one hand, the flight planning decides the flight speed and flight path based on sensor locations, energy budgets, and the transmission schedule. On the other hand, the transmission schedule decides for each sensor when to deliver data and what transmission power to use based on the energy budgets and flight plan. By observing three import optimality properties, we decouple the joint problem into two subproblems: drone flight planning and sensor transmission scheduling. For the first problem, we propose a dynamic programming algorithm to produce the optimal flight planning. For the second problem, with a flight plan as input, we introduce a novel technique (water-tank), which together with dynamic programming, is the key to achieve an optimal transmission schedule that maximizes data collection. Simulations show that the separately determined flight plan and transmission schedule are near-optimal for the original joint problem.

Author(s):  
A. Meghdari ◽  
H. Sayyaadi

Abstract An optimization technique based on the well known Dynamic Programming Algorithm is applied to the motion control trajectories and path planning of multi-jointed fingers in dextrous hand designs. A three fingered hand with each finger containing four degrees of freedom is considered for analysis. After generating the kinematics and dynamics equations of such a hand, optimum values of the joints torques and velocities are computed such that the finger-tips of the hand are moved through their prescribed trajectories with the least time or/and energy to reach the object being grasped. Finally, optimal as well as feasible solutions for the multi-jointed fingers are identified and the results are presented.


Author(s):  
Jiashen Li ◽  
◽  
Yun Pan ◽  

The improvement of chip integration leads to the increase of power density of system chips, which leads to the overheating of system chips. When dispatching the power density of system chips, some working modules are selectively closed to avoid all modules on the chip being turned on at the same time and to solve the problem of overheating. Taking 2D grid-on-chip network as the research object, an optimal scheduling algorithm of system-on-chip power density based on network-on-chip (NoC) is proposed. Under the constraints of thermal design power (TDP) and system, dynamic programming algorithm is used to solve the optimal application set throughput allocation from bottom to top by dynamic programming for the number and frequency level of each application configuration processor under the given application set of network-on-chip. On this basis, the simulated annealing algorithm is used to complete the application mapping aiming at heat dissipation effect and communication delay. The open and closed processor layout is determined. After obtaining the layout results, the TDP is adjusted. The maximum TDP constraint is iteratively searched according to the feedback loop of the system over-hot spots, and the power density scheduling performance of the system chip is maximized under this constraint, so as to ensure the system core. At the same time, chip throughput can effectively solve the problem of chip overheating. The experimental results show that the proposed algorithm increases the system chip throughput by about 11%, improves the system throughput loss, and achieves a balance between the system chip power consumption and scheduling time.


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