Base Placement Optimization for Coverage Mobile Manipulation Tasks

Huiwen Zhang, Kai Mi, Zhijun Zhang

Base placement optimization (BPO) is a fundamental capability for mobile manipulation and has been researched for decades. However, it is still very challenging for some reasons. First, compared with humans, current robots are extremely inflexible, and therefore have higher requirements on the accuracy of base placements (BPs). Second, the BP and task constraints are coupled with each other. The optimal BP depends on the task constraints, and in BP will affect task constraints in turn. More tricky is that some task constraints are flexible and non-deterministic. Third, except for fulfilling tasks, some other performance metrics such as optimal energy consumption and minimal execution time need to be considered, which makes the BPO problem even more complicated. In this paper, a Scale-like disc (SLD) representation of the workspace is used to decouple task constraints and BPs. To evaluate reachability and return optimal working pose over SLDs, a reachability map (RM) is constructed offline. In order to optimize the objectives of coverage, manipulability, and time cost simultaneously, this paper formulates the BPO as a multi-objective optimization problem (MOOP). Among them, the time optimal objective is modeled as a traveling salesman problem (TSP), which is more in line with the actual situation. The evolutionary method is used to solve the MOOP. Besides, to ensure the validity and optimality of the solution, collision detection is performed on the candidate BPs, and solutions from BPO are further fine-tuned according to the specific given task. Finally, the proposed method is used to solve a real-world toilet coverage cleaning task. Experiments show that the optimized BPs can significantly improve the coverage and efficiency of the task.

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