There are many situations where it’s impossible, complicated or too
time-consuming for humans to enter and carry out operations. Think of
contaminated areas following a nuclear accident, or the need to erect
structures such as antennae on mountain tops. These are examples of
where flying robots could be used.
ROBOTS TAUGHT TO THINK AND ACT AUTONOMOUSLY
The EU’s
ARCAS project
(Aerial Robotics Cooperative Assembly System) has designed a range of
different flying robots with multi-joint manipulator arms to work
together on grasping, transporting and depositing parts safely and
efficiently. The autonomy and skills of the robots is being developed to
build or disassemble structures for a host of future applications, from
rescue missions to inspection and maintenance in the energy and space
sectors.
‘The idea is that the robots should be able to fly in anywhere where
it is impossible or impractical for piloted aircraft or ground robots
to operate,’ explained ARCAS project manager Professor Aníbal Ollero, of
the University of Seville. ‘We have helicopters, and multi-rotor
systems with eight rotors to give more hovering control, increase the
payload and carry arms with greater degrees of freedom.’
Up to 10 mini-prototypes have been demonstrated working together on an indoor test bed at
CATEC
, the Advanced Aerospace Technologies Centre in Seville, Spain. Larger
outdoor demonstrations using adapted helicopters and bigger multi-rotors
have been performed at the facilities of
DLR , the German national aerospace research centre, near Munich, and the
University of Seville , to grasp bars and transport them over distance before depositing them.
The idea of flying robots is not new, of course. A large range of
unmanned aerial vehicles are already in use, not least to take
photographs and collect other sensor data. But ARCAS is pioneering in
that the flying robots are being equipped with arms to perform
increasingly complicated manipulation tasks autonomously. They are
programmed with briefing information and 3D maps to orient them,
equipped with sensors to adapt to mistakes (such as the dropping of a
part) or changing circumstances (like weather conditions), and even
taught how to land safely in an emergency or fly home automatically when
they lose contact with base.
‘The robots work very well,” said Professor Ollero. ‘We still need
to improve accuracy and repetitiveness in different conditions, but the
results are very promising. We have demonstrated aerial manipulation
with six- and seven-joint arms and perception and planning
functionalities, and this is a first worldwide.’ Now the aim is to
improve the robots’ robustness and reactivity, working them together in
bigger numbers and increasing the complexity of tasks they perform.
FROM PIPELINE INSPECTION TO SPACE JUNK
ARCAS is paving the way for the flying robots to be used in
applications as soon as national safety laws allow. At first, this is
likely to be for inspection and maintenance purposes: oil and gas
pipelines and electricity networks stretching over thousands of
kilometres, for example. In the medium term, the team believes the
robots could cooperate in fast building of structures, such as antennae
stations in remote areas or platforms between buildings, say, to rescue
people from fires. In the long term, post-2020, they will be able to
dismantle satellites, service space stations or even help remove space
junk.
The ARCAS project (Aerial Robotics Cooperative Assembly System), involves eight
partners
from five countries and is funded to the tune of 6.15 million euros by
the European Commission’s 7th Framework Programme. It began in 2011 and
finishes in November 2015.
Link to project on CORDISLink to project's website