Abstract

Agricultural vehicles are adopted to undertake farming tasks by traversing along crop rows in the field. Working quality depends significantly on the driving skills of the operator. Automatic guidance has been introduced into agriculture to achieve high-accuracy path tracking during the last decades, which contributes considerably to straight-line navigation. The objective of this research was to develop an autonomous navigation controller that allowed movement autonomy for various agricultural vehicles. Three wheel-type vehicles were used as the test platform featuring automatic steering, hydrostatic transmission and speed control, which included a rice transplanter, a high-clearance sprayer and a tractor. A dual-antenna RTK-GNSS receiver was attached to the vehicles to provide spatial information on both positioning and heading by using the RTX service from Trimble. A path planning method was proposed to create a straight-line reference path by giving two points, and the target path was determined according to the vehicle initial status and working assignment. Headland turning was comprehensively taken into account by listing different turn patterns in order to realize autonomous navigation at the headland. The navigation controller hardware was fabricated for program execution, data processing and information communication with peripherals. A human-machine interface was designed for the operator to complete basic setting, path planning and navigation control by providing controls. Field experiments were conducted to evaluate the performance and versatility of the newly developed autonomous navigation controller in guiding agricultural vehicles to follow straight paths and turn at the headland. Results showed that an appropriate turn pattern was automatically executed when finishing straight-line navigation. The lateral error in straight-line tracking was no more than 6 cm, 6 cm and 5 cm for the rice transplanter, the high-clearance sprayer and the tractor, respectively. And the maximum lateral RMS error was 3.10 cm, 4.75 cm, 2.21 cm in terms of straight-line tracking, which indicated that the newly developed autonomous navigation controller was versatile and of high robustness in guiding various agricultural vehicles. Keywords: autonomous navigation, navigation controller, agricultural vehicles, straight-line tracking, straight path, headland turning DOI: 10.25165/j.ijabe.20201304.5470 Citation: Yin X, Wang Y X, Chen Y L, Jin C Q, Du J. Development of autonomous navigation controller for agricultural vehicles. Int J Agric & Biol Eng, 2020; 13(4): 70–76.

Highlights

  • Agricultural automation has been realized through the application of technologies in multiple disciplines including mechanics, electronics, computer science, automatic control, spectroscopy and so on, which makes a considerable contribution in saving labor force, alleviating driver fatigue, improving work efficiency and quality and increasing farmer profits[1,2,3,4,5]

  • Three wheel-type vehicles were used as the test platform featuring automatic steering, hydrostatic transmission and speed control, which included a rice transplanter, a high-clearance sprayer and a tractor

  • A series of field experiments were designed and conducted to evaluate methods proposed for path planning and headland turn, the stability and performance of the newly developed autonomous navigation controller by integrating it into those three typical agricultural vehicles

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Agricultural automation has been realized through the application of technologies in multiple disciplines including mechanics, electronics, computer science, automatic control, spectroscopy and so on, which makes a considerable contribution in saving labor force, alleviating driver fatigue, improving work efficiency and quality and increasing farmer profits[1,2,3,4,5]. Agricultural vehicles are widely utilized as important participants in soil-related field operations. Their automation level directly affects agricultural productivity. Many researchers concentrate their attention on automatic control and autonomous operation of agricultural vehicles, especially on precision localization and automatic guidance. Spatial information needs to be known with respect to the local or global reference system to localize the agricultural vehicle and operating targets. For localization in the field, absolute positioning is preferred especially when there exist no reference objects. Global positioning sensors are used in automatic navigation of agricultural vehicles based on GNSS Positioning and heading compass technologies[11,12,13,14]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call