• Title/Summary/Keyword: Upland robot

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A Study on Modular Agricultural Robotic Platform for Upland (밭 노지 환경 주행을 위한 모듈형 농업 로봇 플랫폼에 대한 연구)

  • Cho, Yongjun;Woo, Seong Yong;Song, Su Hwan;Hong, Hyung Gil;Yun, Haeyong;Oh, Jang Seok;Kim, Junseong;Kim, Dong Woo;Seo, Kab Ho;Kim, Dae Hee
    • The Journal of Korea Robotics Society
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    • v.15 no.2
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    • pp.124-130
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    • 2020
  • This paper designed modular agricultural robotic platform capable of a variety of agricultural tasks to address the problems caused by a decline in agricultural populations and an increase in average age. We propose a modular robotic platform that can perform many tasks required in field farming by replacing only work modules with common robotic platforms. This platform is capable of steering while driving on four wheels in an upland environment where farm work is performed, and an attitude control module is attached to each drive module to control the attitude of the platform. In addition, the width of the platform is designed to be variable in order to operate in various ridges according to the crop cultivation method. Finally, we evaluated five items: variable width, gradient, attitude control angle, step and road speed in order to carry out the farming industry while maintaining a stable posture.

Development of Optimized Headland Turning Mechanism on an Agricultural Robot for Korean Garlic Farms

  • Ha, JongWoo;Lee, ChangJoo;Pal, Abhishesh;Park, GunWoo;Kim, HakJin
    • Journal of Biosystems Engineering
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    • v.43 no.4
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    • pp.273-284
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    • 2018
  • Purpose: Conventional headland turning typically requires repeated forward and backward movements to move the farming equipment to the next row. This research focuses on developing an upland agricultural robot with an optimized headland turning mechanism that enables a $180^{\circ}$ turning positioning to the next row in one steering motion designed for a two-wheel steering, four-wheel drive agricultural robot named the HADA-bot. The proposed steering mechanism allows for faster turnings at each headland compared to those of the conventional steering system. Methods: The HADA-bot was designed with 1.7-m wide wheel tracks to travel along the furrows of a garlic bed, and a look-ahead path following algorithm was applied using a real-time kinematic global positioning system signal. Pivot turning tests focused primarily on accuracy regarding the turning radius for the next path matching, saving headland turning time, area, and effort. Results: Several test cases were performed by evaluating right and left turns on two different surfaces: concrete and soil, at three speeds: 1, 2, and 3 km/h. From the left and right side pivot turning results, the percentage of lateral deviation is within the acceptable range of 10% even on the soil surface. This U-turn scheme reduces 67% and 54% of the headland turning time, and 36% and 32% of the required headland area compared to a 50 hp tractor (ISEKI, TA5240, Ehime, Japan) and a riding-type cultivator (CFM-1200, Asia Technology, Deagu, Rep. Korea), respectively. Conclusion: The pivot turning trajectory on both soil and concrete surfaces achieved similar results within the typical operating speed range. Overall, these results prove that the pivot turning mechanism is suitable for improving conventional headland turning by reducing both turning radius and turning time.