Title: 2.019: Design of Ocean Systems I Fall 2005
12.019 Design of Ocean Systems I Fall 2005
- Design of a small, autonomous surface vessel
capable of tracking a subsurface acoustic source
2Challenge Statement
- Your goal is to create a new capability in
ocean observation, by constructing a small,
autonomous surface vessel system capable of
tracking a subsurface acoustic source - PROJECT TECHNICAL GOALS (descending priority)
- Demonstrate a small, autonomous surface vessel
homing to a - subsurface acoustic beacon.
- Demonstrate this in Sea State 3 conditions.
- Demonstrate navigation in a global frame, e.g.,
GPS, compass. - Demonstrate waypoint autopilot capability.
3A real-world problem
4Prioritized Objectives
- Develop a stable surface vessel
- Create an acoustic tracking system
- Maintain remote control of vessel
- Develop control system to allow for autonomous
operation - Create a user-friendly interface
- Develop waypoint tracking
5(No Transcript)
6Trolling Motor
7Azimuth Motor
8Transducer
9Hydrophones
10GPS, Compass, Amp, Electronics
11System Requirements
- Platform
- Controls
- Acoustic Sensing
12System Requirements
Small, surface vesselcapable of operating in
sea state 3
Sea State 3 Mean Wave Height is 0.5 - 1.25m,
Modal Wave Period is 5-14.8 seconds
13Hull
- Wilderness Systems Pungo 120, 3.7 m kayak
- Full length keel line
- Waterproof compartment in stern
14Hull Experiments
- Inclining test and initial condition response
We used a digital level for inclining
tests Initial condition response tests were
recorded with a high data rate Analog Devices
ADXL203 two axis accelerometer
15Results of Experiments
At ballast weight of 100 kg, metacentric height
is 26 cm
16These results show an optimal performance point
at 100 kg payload.
Damped Natural Frequency 1.2 Hz Damping Ratio
0.21
17Hull Wave Response
- Wave response at target weight
This gives a significant roll of 9 in average
sea state 3 conditions 0.88m significant wave
height and 7.5 second period
18Propulsion
- Minn-Kota Riptide trolling motor
- Seawater rated, has sacrificial anode
- 80 pounds bollard thrust
- Cable/pulley system to steer
19Power Systems
- All power provided by sealed lead acid batteries
- 2 80Ah batteries provide propulsion and amplifier
power - 2 18Ah batteries provide acoustic electronics
power - Batteries connect with keyed Anderson PowerPole
connectors
20Safety
- 2 emergency stop buttons remove power from
propulsion systems - Warning light indicates propulsion system power
- All circuits are appropriately fused
21Integration
- Removable deck holds batteries, main and motor
controller TT8 enclosures - Emergency stop, main power distribution and bilge
pump are hard wired into kayak - All electrical connectors are keyed and labeled
22Packaging
- Electronics are in waterproof enclosures
- All connections made with environmentally sealed
Switchcraft connectors - All pass-throughs made with waterproof cord grips.
23Azimuth Motor
- 12v Servo motor
- Attached encoder
- Watertight housing
- Self-homing via hall sensor
- Proportional control with 360 rpm max slew rate
- Power consumption
- 2 A _at_ max slew
24Azimuth Motor Controller
25Directional Stability
- Bare hull is unstable (confirmed in first sea
trials) - Hydrodynamic center near center of mass
- Destabilizing spring term
- Addition of foil-shaped struts at stern drives
hydrodynamic center further aft - Provides stabilizing spring term
26Directional Stability
- Hydrophone struts have linear lift profile for
AOA - Hydrodynamic center at 3.02m aft of bow
- 1.02m aft of center of mass
CL
Source JavaFoil
27Trolling motor placement
- Forward mounted propulsor gives increased control
stability. - Places motor and associated electric noise and
magnetic fields far away from compass and
computers.
28Resistance (_at_ 1.25 m/s)
- Cylinder struts
- 65.5 N
- Streamlined struts
- 35.3 N
- Thrust available _at_ full throttle
- 242.3 N
- Effective speed limit
- 2.4 m/s (4.6 kts)
29Resistance in Waves
Added resistance due to wave action found to be
negligible, even in sea state 3.
Source "Experimental Results of Non-linear
Seakeeping Motions, Wetted Surface and Sectional
Force Tests on a Ship with Large Bow Flare," by
S.B. Cohen (1995, University of Michigan
Department of Naval Architecture and Marine
Engineering)
30System Requirements
Autonomous operation in acoustic tracking and
waypoint navigation mode
31Sensors
- Garmin eTrex Legend handheld GPS
- PNI Corp. TCM2 Compass
- Wireless
32Control System Layout
33(No Transcript)
34System Requirements
Demonstrate homing to a subsurface acoustic
beacon.
35Acoustic Layout and Interaction
Hi location of hydrophone i, i 1, 2, 3 T
location of transducer
36Acoustic Components
- International Transducer Corp. ITC-1001 Spherical
Transducer - Omnidirectional transmitting/receiving
- Sonardyne Type 7656 Transponder
- Interrogation frequency 20,492 Hz
- Reply frequency 29,762 Hz
- Sensor Technology Limited SQ03 Hydrophone
37Range and Bearing
Transponder
Bearing to source
38Acoustic Navigation
- Constrained by challenge statement
- Short baseline acoustic navigation
- Transponder at source
- Determine position of source relative to ASV
- Affords portability of system to different
operating environments
39Acoustic System
40Signal Modulation
- Product of two sinusoids
- Low-pass filter to remove HF component
- Resultant output is 500 Hz, which TT8 can sample
at 5X the Nyquist rate
41New Hardware Developments
- Expanded modulation setup to include hydrophones,
programmable amplifiers, bandpass filters - Constructed 3-channel setup on breadboard for
testing purposes - Printed circuit boards for packaging after
circuit design was verified
42Discoveries/Fixes
- MAX038 is unstable as a carrier sine, therefore
unfit for modulation XR2206 from pinger works
better - Breadboards are less than ideal, especially if
you have to move them around a lot - PCBs are hard to get right the first time
43Working hardware
- The Stack consists of 4 boards 3 hydrophone
sense and modulation, and one for ping and
carrier sine generation - Stack and TT8 fit in 4x4x8 otter box with
splash-proof connections to hydrophones,
amplifier, data and power - Modulation output is stable to 200 Hz
44Recorded Signals
45Autocorrelation
46Autocorrelation
47Autocorrelation
48Autocorrelation
49(No Transcript)
50Acoustic Processing Program
51Accomplishments Constructed a Short Base Line
Acoustic Tracking System from scratch
Experimented with and designed circuits to
amplify and control a hydrophone array
Built a circuit to drive a transducer, simulating
the transponder's signal, from a TT8
52Learned Auto-Correlation and other Signal
Processing Techniques
Characterized the Roll Response of our hull to
Initial Conditions
Conducted an Incline Test
53Designed and Constructed Azimuth Motor Controller
and Watertight Container
Learned to process GPS data with a TT8 and C
programs
Tested the Transponder Hardware and determined
its response is in the noise and must be filtered
54Accomplishments
Testing wireless control and autonomous steering
Testing acoustic system hardware
55Next Steps
- Finish integrating acoustics hardware with
hull/power plant - Accurately calculate bearing from real acoustic
data - Integrate acoustic data output with control
system - AARGH!!! FOLLOW THAT SOUND!!!
56Thank you!
Mechanical Engineering Department Center for
Ocean Engineering MIT Sea Grant MIT Towing
Tank Edgerton Center Student Shop Pappalardo
Machine Shop MIT Sailing Pavilion MIT 13SEAS
- Dr. Franz Hover
- Professor Michael Triantafyllou
- Professor Chryssostomos Chryssostomidis
- Christiaan Adams
- Dr. Ethem Sozer
- Professor Arthur Baggeroer
- Professor Steven Leeb
- Matt Greytak
57Questions?