Extrinsic Calibration of 2D Laser Rangefinders Using an Existing Cuboid-Shaped Corridor as the Reference

Sensors (Basel). 2018 Dec 10;18(12):4371. doi: 10.3390/s18124371.

Abstract

Laser rangefinders (LRFs) are widely used in autonomous systems for indoor positioning and mobile mapping through the simultaneous localization and mapping (SLAM) approach. The extrinsic parameters of multiple LRFs need to be determined, and they are one of the key factors impacting system performance. This study presents an extrinsic calibration method of multiple LRFs that requires neither extra calibration sensors nor special artificial reference landmarks. Instead, it uses a naturally existing cuboid-shaped corridor as the calibration reference, and it hence needs no additional cost. The present method takes advantage of two types of geometric constraints for the calibration, which can be found in a common cuboid-shaped corridor. First, the corresponding point cloud is scanned by the set of LRFs. Second, the lines that are scanned on the corridor surfaces are extracted from the point cloud. Then, the lines within the same surface and the lines within two adjacent surfaces satisfy the coplanarity constraint and the orthogonality constraint, respectively. As such, the calibration problem is converted into a nonlinear optimization problem with the constraints. Simulation experiments and experiments based on real data verified the feasibility and stability of the proposed method.

Keywords: 2D laser rangefinder; extrinsic calibration; indoor positioning; line detection; mobile mapping.