DocumentCode
174670
Title
Fault Detection, Isolation, and Recovery techniques for large clusters of Inertial Measurement Units
Author
Bittner, Drew E. ; Christian, John A. ; Bishop, Robert H. ; May, Dominik
Author_Institution
Mech. & Aerosp. Eng. Dept., West Virginia Univ., Morgantown, WV, USA
fYear
2014
fDate
5-8 May 2014
Firstpage
219
Lastpage
229
Abstract
Although Micro Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs) have found widespread use in a variety of navigation applications that require low-cost and/or lightweight systems, their performance is typically not suitable for precision navigation. To address this deficiency, current research is investigating large clusters (15+) of MEMS IMUs with the objective of matching the performance of a single high-quality, monolithic IMU. MEMS IMUs are small enough that a cluster of them is still smaller, less expensive, and lower power than their monolithic counterparts. With such a large cluster of sensors, there is a need for a Fault Detection, Isolation, and Recovery (FDIR) system to identify failed IMUs and prevent them from corrupting the output of the entire cluster. Therefore, the present work develops a FDIR architecture that can identify outlying or erroneous data outputs from large amounts of real-time parallel data, and then prevent erroneous outputs from being incorporated into the state estimation solution. This new work explores FDIR for large IMU clusters using a k-th nearest neighbor algorithm to identify failed IMUs. A Monte Carlo simulation is used to determine the reliability of the technique under random failures of various kinds/sizes. The result of this work is a robust FDIR architecture for use in processing large quantities of redundant IMU measurement information.
Keywords
Monte Carlo methods; fault diagnosis; inertial navigation; microsensors; reliability; state estimation; FDIR system; MEMS IMUs; Monte Carlo simulation; fault detection isolation and recovery system; inertial measurement units; k-th nearest neighbor algorithm; microelectromechanical systems; precision navigation; real-time parallel data; redundant IMU measurement information; reliability; sensor cluster; single high-quality monolithic IMU; state estimation solution; Clustering algorithms; Computer architecture; Fault detection; Micromechanical devices; Navigation; Real-time systems; Sensors;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Position, Location and Navigation Symposium - PLANS 2014, 2014 IEEE/ION
Conference_Location
Monterey, CA
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-3319-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PLANS.2014.6851379
Filename
6851379
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