5.7 KiB
5.7 KiB
LevPodEnv Integration Summary
Overview
LevPodEnv now fully interfaces with PyBullet simulation and uses the maglev_predictor to apply electromagnetic forces based on real-time gap heights and coil currents.
Architecture
System Configuration (From pod.xml and visualize_urdf.py)
- Inverted Maglev System: Pod hangs BELOW track (like a monorail)
- Track: Bottom surface at Z=0, 2m × 0.4m × 0.02m
- Pod Mass: 5.8 kg (from pod.xml inertial)
- Yoke Positions (local coordinates):
- Front Right: (+0.1259m, +0.0508m, +0.08585m)
- Front Left: (+0.1259m, -0.0508m, +0.08585m)
- Back Right: (-0.1259m, +0.0508m, +0.08585m)
- Back Left: (-0.1259m, -0.0508m, +0.08585m)
- Y-axis distance between left/right: 0.1016m
Coil Configuration
- Two Coils:
coilL: Left side (+Y), controls all +Y yokescoilR: Right side (-Y), controls all -Y yokes
- Parameters (preserved from original):
- Resistance: 1.1Ω
- Inductance: 0.0025H (2.5mH)
- Source Voltage: 12V
- Max Current: 10.2A
Action Space
- Type: Box(2)
- Range: [-1, 1] for each coil
- Mapping:
action[0]: PWM duty cycle for left coil (+Y side)action[1]: PWM duty cycle for right coil (-Y side)
Observation Space
- Type: Box(5)
- Components:
avg_gap_front(m): Average gap height of front left & right yokesavg_gap_back(m): Average gap height of back left & right yokesroll(rad): Roll angle about X-axis (calculated from yoke Z positions)roll_rate(rad/s): Angular velocity about X-axisz_velocity(m/s): Vertical velocity
Physics Pipeline (per timestep)
1. Coil Current Update
currL = self.coilL.update(pwm_L, dt) # First-order RL circuit model
currR = self.coilR.update(pwm_R, dt)
2. Gap Height Calculation
For each of 4 yokes:
- Transform local position to world coordinates using rotation matrix
- Add 5mm (half-height of 10mm yoke box) to get top surface
- Gap height = -yoke_top_z (track at Z=0, yoke below)
- Separate into front and back averages
3. Roll Angle Calculation
roll = arctan2((right_z_avg - left_z_avg) / y_distance)
- Uses Z-position difference between left (+Y) and right (-Y) yokes
- Y-distance = 0.1016m (distance between yoke centerlines)
4. Force/Torque Prediction
# Convert to Ansys convention (negative currents)
currL_ansys = -abs(currL)
currR_ansys = -abs(currR)
# Predict for front and back independently
force_front, torque_front = predictor.predict(currL_ansys, currR_ansys, roll_deg, gap_front_mm)
force_back, torque_back = predictor.predict(currL_ansys, currR_ansys, roll_deg, gap_back_mm)
5. Force Application
- Front Force: Applied at [+0.1259, 0, 0.08585] in local frame
- Back Force: Applied at [-0.1259, 0, 0.08585] in local frame
- Roll Torque: Average of front/back torques, applied about X-axis
- Converted from mN·m to N·m:
torque_Nm = avg_torque / 1000
- Converted from mN·m to N·m:
6. Simulation Step
p.stepSimulation() # 240 Hz (dt = 1/240s)
Reward Function
reward = 1.0
reward -= gap_error * 100 # Target: 10mm gap
reward -= roll_error * 50 # Keep level
reward -= z_vel_penalty * 10 # Minimize oscillation
reward -= power * 0.01 # Efficiency
Termination Conditions
- Gap outside [2mm, 30mm] range
- Roll angle exceeds ±10°
Info Dictionary
Each step returns:
{
'currL': float, # Left coil current (A)
'currR': float, # Right coil current (A)
'gap_front': float, # Front average gap (m)
'gap_back': float, # Back average gap (m)
'roll': float, # Roll angle (rad)
'force_front': float, # Front force prediction (N)
'force_back': float, # Back force prediction (N)
'torque': float # Average torque (mN·m)
}
Key Design Decisions
Why Two Coils Instead of Four?
- Physical system has one coil per side (left/right)
- Each coil's magnetic field affects both front and back yokes on that side
- Simplifies control: differential current creates roll torque
Why Separate Front/Back Predictions?
- Gap heights can differ due to pitch angle
- More accurate force modeling
- Allows pitch control if needed in future
Roll Angle from Yoke Positions
As requested: roll = arctan((right_z - left_z) / y_distance)
- Uses actual yoke Z positions in world frame
- More accurate than quaternion-based roll (accounts for deformation)
- Matches physical sensor measurements
Current Sign Convention
- Coils produce positive current (0 to +10.2A)
- Ansys model expects negative currents (-15A to 0A)
- Conversion:
currL_ansys = -abs(currL)
Usage Example
from lev_pod_env import LevPodEnv
# Create environment
env = LevPodEnv(use_gui=True) # Set False for training
# Reset
obs, info = env.reset()
# obs = [gap_front, gap_back, roll, roll_rate, z_vel]
# Step
action = [0.5, 0.5] # 50% PWM on both coils
obs, reward, terminated, truncated, info = env.step(action)
# Check results
print(f"Gaps: {info['gap_front']*1000:.2f}mm, {info['gap_back']*1000:.2f}mm")
print(f"Forces: {info['force_front']:.2f}N, {info['force_back']:.2f}N")
print(f"Currents: {info['currL']:.2f}A, {info['currR']:.2f}A")
env.close()
Testing
Run test_env.py to verify integration:
cd "/Users/adipu/Documents/lev_control_4pt_small/RL Testing"
/opt/miniconda3/envs/RLenv/bin/python test_env.py
Next Steps for RL Training
- Test environment with random actions (test_env.py)
- Verify force magnitudes are reasonable (should see ~50-100N upward)
- Check that roll control works (differential currents produce torque)
- Train RL agent (PPO, SAC, or TD3 recommended)
- Tune reward function weights based on training results