4.7 Article

Analysis of a motion planning problem for sweet-pepper harvesting in a dense obstacle environment

期刊

BIOSYSTEMS ENGINEERING
卷 146, 期 -, 页码 85-97

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.biosystemseng.2015.07.004

关键词

Motion planning; Agricultural robot; Sensitivity analysis; Rapidly exploring random trees; Grasp pose

资金

  1. European Commission (CROPS GA) [246252]
  2. Dutch horticultural product board (PT) [14555]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

To reach a fruit in an obstacle-dense crop environment, robotic fruit harvesting requires a collision-free motion of the manipulator and end-effector. A novel two-part analysis was conducted of a sweet-pepper harvesting robot based on data of fruit (N = 158) and stem locations collected from a greenhouse. The first part of the analysis compared two methods of selecting the azimuth angle of the end-effector. The new 'constrained-azimuth' method avoided risky paths and achieved a motion planning success similar to the 'full-azimuth' method. In the second part, a sensitivity analysis was conducted for five parameters specifying the crop (stem spacing and fruit location), the robot (end-effector dimensions and robot position) and the planning algorithm, to evaluate their effect on successfully finding a collision-free goal configuration and path. Reducing end-effector dimensions and widening stem spacing are promising research directions because they significantly improved goal configuration success, from 63% to 84%. However, the fruit location at the stem is the strongest influencing parameter and therefore provides an incentive to train or breed plants that develop more fruit at the front side of the plant stem. The two analyses may serve as useful tools to study motion planning problems in a dense obstacle environment. (C) 2015 IAgrE. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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