Abstract

The rapid rise of ultra-low-cost dual-frequency GNSS chipsets and micro-electronic-mechanical-system (MEMS) inertial sensors makes it possible to develop low-cost navigation systems, which meet the requirements for many applications, including self-driving cars. This study proposes the use of a dual-frequency u-blox F9P GNSS receiver with xsens MTi670 industrial-grade MEMS IMU to develop an ultra-low-cost tightly coupled (TC) triple-constellation GNSS PPP/INS integrated system for precise land vehicular applications. The performance of the proposed system is assessed through comparison with three different TC GNSS PPP/INS integrated systems. The first system uses the Trimble R9s geodetic-grade receiver with the tactical-grade Stim300 IMU, the second system uses the u-blox F9P receiver with the Stim300 IMU, while the third system uses the Trimble R9s receiver with the xsens MTi670 IMU. An improved robust adaptive Kalman filter is adopted and used in this study due to its ability to reduce the effect of measurement outliers and dynamic model errors on the obtained positioning and attitude accuracy. Real-time precise ephemeris and clock products from the Centre National d’Etudes Spatials (CNES) are used to mitigate the effects of orbital and satellite clock errors. Three land vehicular field trials were carried out to assess the performance of the proposed system under both open-sky and challenging environments. It is shown that the tracking capability of the GNSS receiver is the dominant factor that limits the positioning accuracy, while the IMU grade represents the dominant factor for the attitude accuracy. The proposed TC triple-constellation GNSS PPP/INS integrated system achieves sub-meter-level positioning accuracy in both of the north and up directions, while it achieves meter-level positioning accuracy in the east direction. Sub-meter-level positioning accuracy is achieved when the Stim300 IMU is used with the u-blox F9P GNSS receiver. In contrast, decimeter-level positioning accuracy is consistently achieved through TC GNSS PPP/INS integration when a geodetic-grade GNSS receiver is used, regardless of whether a tactical- or an industrial-grade IMU is used. The root mean square (RMS) errors of the proposed system’s attitude are about 0.878°, 0.804°, and 2.905° for the pitch, roll, and azimuth angles, respectively. The RMS errors of the attitude are significantly improved to reach about 0.034°, 0.038°, and 0.280° for the pitch, roll, and azimuth angles, respectively, when a tactical-grade IMU is used, regardless of whether a geodetic- or low-cost GNSS receiver is used.

Highlights

  • GNSS precise point positioning (PPP) is capable of providing precise positioning solutions without any additional GNSS base stations [1]

  • This paper develops an ultra-low-cost tightly coupled (TC) triple-constellation GNSS PPP/micro-electro-mechanical system (MEMS)-based Inertial navigation system (INS) integrated system

  • The performance of the developed system was assessed through three land vehicular field trials

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Summary

Introduction

GNSS precise point positioning (PPP) is capable of providing precise positioning solutions without any additional GNSS base stations [1]. In [20], a TC DF GNSS PPP/RISS integration was assessed through three land vehicular field trials Their system used both of the DF NovAtel SPAN OEM6 and OEMV geodetic-grade receivers along with IMU-CPT and IMU-KVH1750 tactical-grade IMUs. The developed system achieved decimeter-level horizontal positioning accuracy with 50 cm maximum positioning errors under 10 s GNSS outage. The use of RISS reduces the cost of the inertial device by more than a half, the developed system is considered as a high-end integrated system because of using geodetic-grade GNSS receivers along with tactical-grade IMUs. This paper develops an ultra-low-cost TC triple-constellation GNSS PPP/MEMS-based INS integrated system. Three land vehicular field trials were carried out to assess the performance of the integrated solution under both open-sky and challenging environments Both of the positioning and attitude solutions of the developed system are evaluated compared to the high-end counterparts. In the adopted GNSS PPP model, the pre-saved real-time orbit and clock products for GPS, GLONASS, and Galileo are obtained from the Centre National d’Etudes Spatials (CNES) analysis center (available at: http://www.ppp-wizard.net/products/REAL_TIME/, accessed on 20 June 2020)

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