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Robotic systems for retrieval of contaminated material from hazardous zones

Reference Number
EP/M026477/1
Title
Robotic systems for retrieval of contaminated material from hazardous zones
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Nuclear Fission and Fusion(Nuclear Fission, Nuclear supporting technologies)
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Computer Science and Informatics)
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (Mechanical, Aeronautical and Manufacturing Engineering)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Not Cross-cutting
Sociological economical and environmental impact of energy (Environmental dimensions)
Principal Investigator
Dr R Stolkin
School of Mechanical Engineering
University of Birmingham
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
01 April 2015
End Date
31 March 2018
Duration
36 months
Total Grant Value
£556,624
Industrial Sectors
Energy
Region
West Midlands
Programme
Energy : Energy
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Dr R Stolkin, School of Mechanical Engineering, University of Birmingham
Other Investigator
Professor A Leonardis, School of Computer Science, University of Birmingham
Dr M Mistry, School of Computer Science, University of Birmingham
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, National Nuclear Laboratory
Project Contact, Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI)
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
Both Korean and UK nuclear industries share the same challenge of accessing large radio-chemical process environments to perform remote intervention tasks. In particular, both UK and Korea have identified a significant need for unmanned systems which can handle and retrieve contaminated materials in zones which are too hazardous to risk manned entries.This project will directly address this need by developing novel robotic systems which can enter, monitor, and carry out manipulative actions on a wide variety of objects and materials in nuclear decommissioning environments, which would otherwise remain inaccessible and unmanageable.The UoB-KAERI-NNL consortium will develop hardware, software, algorithms and control methods for a mobile robot manipulator, comprising an unmanned vehicle equipped with an arm and end-effectors (which could include hands and-or cutting devices), which can enter hazardous environments, perform a wide variety of manipulation tasks on materials inside those environments, and retrieve objects from the environment in a controlled fashion.Additionally, we will develop a smaller "child" pipe-climbing robot, which can ride on the mother vehicle and be deployed onto pipe-work (prevalent in many nuclear installations) via the mother vehicle's manipulator arm. The purpose of the child robot is to inspect zones which would otherwise be inaccessible in highly complex and 3D nuclear plant environments, for example to reach places that are high, narrow or cluttered. Additionally, cameras mounted on the child robot can provide useful alternative views of the mother-vehicle, facilitating autonomous "visual-servoing" control of the manipulator arm, and/or better tele-operative control by an expert human operator.The control approach will be one of "semi-autonomy", "tele-autonomy" or "variable-autonomy" which would therefore go beyond what has previously been attempted in nuclear environments. Traditionally, safety-critical industries have been very conservative about allowing the devolution of control from human operator to an autonomous machine, and have instead relied on direct tele-operation (e.g. a human controlling each joint of a robot arm by means of switches or joy-sticks). However, it is becoming increasingly clear that the combination of i) the vast scale of the decommissioning task, and ii) the complexity and high degrees-of-freedom of the robots needed to perform decommissioning, means that certain kinds of autonomous control will be required as "operator-assistance" technologies. For example, a human operator should be able to mouse-click on an object, and have the robot autonomously grasp it, rather than the human attempting to control two or more mobile base motors, six or more arm motors and two or more gripper fingers directly.Additionally, autonomous sensing approaches, such as 3D reconstruction of environments by computational vision, will be necessary for both situational awareness of the remote human operator, and automatic planning and control algorithms running on the robot. We will develop advanced computer vision and path-planning algorithms, which will enable collision-free navigation of the robot vehicle, and successful autonomous arm and hand trajectories to effect robust grasps on arbitrarily shaped objects and materials.Furthermore, we will develop advanced dynamics models and control methods to facilitate highly dynamic robot actions, such as braciation or swinging of the climbing child robot, or forceful actions of the mother mobile-maniplator with respect to contacts with its environment, for example cutting and grinding of objects, or dragging of grasped objects.The overall aim is to enable the safe, unmanned retrieval of contaminated materials from hazardous zones.
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Added to Database
15/07/15