Frontiers in Marine Science (Mar 2024)
Collaborative communication-based ocean observation research with heterogeneous unmanned surface vessels
Abstract
Unmanned surface vehicles (USVs) are crucial in ensuring maritime safety and observation, attracting widespread attention and research. However, a single USV exhibits limited performance and cannot effectively observe complex marine environments. In contrast, clusters of USVs can collaborate to execute complex maritime tasks, thereby enhancing the overall operational efficiency. USVs typically form heterogeneous clusters by combining vehicles with varying maneuverabilities and communication network capabilities. This has sparked an increased interest in cooperative communication research within heterogeneous USV clusters. The heterogeneous USVs discussed in this paper share the same dynamic model; however, they differ in dynamic parameters and communication capabilities. First, this study establishes a three-degree-of-freedom motion mathematical model for an underdriven USV considering environmental interference. It estimates the dynamic parameters of four USVs and evaluates their communication abilities, laying the foundation for researching the cooperative control of heterogeneous USV clusters and their application in Ocean Observation. Next, the communication capability of the USVs is assessed by studying the communication mode and signal transmission loss within the USV clusters. This study investigates the problem of cooperative communication in USV cluster formation, starting with the communication delay of USV clusters under a directed switching topology. Finally, a coherent formation controller is designed under a switching communication topology to address the dynamic transformation of communication topologies within heterogeneous USV clusters. This verifies that heterogeneous USV clusters can seamlessly form and maintain formation shapes during communication topology transformations through formation simulation experiments involving four heterogeneous USVs was 22% higher than that of dispersed control topology structures. This study provides a solid foundation for future investigations into the cooperative control of heterogeneous USV clusters and their applications in marine observations.
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