1,394 research outputs found

    A Systematic Literature Survey of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Based Structural Health Monitoring

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    Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) are being employed in a multitude of civil applications owing to their ease of use, low maintenance, affordability, high-mobility, and ability to hover. UAVs are being utilized for real-time monitoring of road traffic, providing wireless coverage, remote sensing, search and rescue operations, delivery of goods, security and surveillance, precision agriculture, and civil infrastructure inspection. They are the next big revolution in technology and civil infrastructure, and it is expected to dominate more than $45 billion market value. The thesis surveys the UAV assisted Structural Health Monitoring or SHM literature over the last decade and categorize UAVs based on their aerodynamics, payload, design of build, and its applications. Further, the thesis presents the payload product line to facilitate the SHM tasks, details the different applications of UAVs exploited in the last decade to support civil structures, and discusses the critical challenges faced in UASHM applications across various domains. Finally, the thesis presents two artificial neural network-based structural damage detection models and conducts a detailed performance evaluation on multiple platforms like edge computing and cloud computing

    Voliro: An Omnidirectional Hexacopter With Tiltable Rotors

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    Extending the maneuverability of unmanned areal vehicles promises to yield a considerable increase in the areas in which these systems can be used. Some such applications are the performance of more complicated inspection tasks and the generation of complex uninterrupted movements of an attached camera. In this paper we address this challenge by presenting Voliro, a novel aerial platform that combines the advantages of existing multi-rotor systems with the agility of omnidirectionally controllable platforms. We propose the use of a hexacopter with tiltable rotors allowing the system to decouple the control of position and orientation. The contributions of this work involve the mechanical design as well as a controller with the corresponding allocation scheme. This work also discusses the design challenges involved when turning the concept of a hexacopter with tiltable rotors into an actual prototype. The agility of the system is demonstrated and evaluated in real- world experiments.Comment: Submitted to Robotics and Automation Magazin

    Unmanned aerial vehicles in the construction industry - Towards a protocol for safe preparation and flight of drones

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    Purpose: Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV), colloquially called drones, are widely applied in many sectors of the economy, including the construction industry. They are used for building inspections, damage assessment, land measurements, safety inspections, monitoring the progress of works, and others. Design/methodology/approach: The study notes that UAV pose new, and not yet present, risks in the construction industry. New threats arise, among others, from the development of new technologies, as well as from the continuous automation and robotization of the construction industry. Education regarding the safe use of UAV and the proper use of drones has a chance to improve the safety of work when using these devices. Findings: The procedure (protocol) was developed for the correct and safe preparation and planning of an unmanned aerial vehicle flight during construction operations. Originality/value: Based on the analysis of available sources, no such complete procedure has yet been developed for the correct, i.e. compliant with applicable legal regulations and occupational health and safety issues, preparation for flying UAV. The verification and validation of the developed flight protocol was performed on a sample of over 100 different flight operations

    A model based design framework for safety verification of a semi-autonomous inspection drone

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    In this paper, we present a model based design approach to the development of a semi-autonomous control system for an inspection drone. The system is tasked with maintaining a set distance from the target being inspected and a constant relative pose, allowing the operator to manoeuvre the drone around the target with ease. It is essential that the robustness of the autonomous behaviour be thoroughly verified prior to actual implementation, as this will involve the flight of a large multi-rotor drone in close proximity to a solid structure. By utilising the Robotic Operating System to communicate between the autonomous controller and the drone, the same Simulink model can be used for numerical coverage testing, high fidelity simulation, offboard execution and final executable deploymen

    A New Classification and Aerial Manipulation Q-PRR Design

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    International audienceThis paper presents a new designation and classification of system with UAV and robot manipulator where a new nomenclature is recognized as being the first contribution in the bibliography of design and systems. Several papers deal a problem of manipulation with a different unmanned aerial vehicle, robot arms and also with different naming of their systems, where the difficulty for locate and finding items and a good paper with its title or even by keywords, multirotor equipped with n-DoF robotic arm is the expression among the most widely used to describe that system. Aerial manipulation formula is presented and proved with a large example in the literature

    Aerial Robotics for Inspection and Maintenance

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    Aerial robots with perception, navigation, and manipulation capabilities are extending the range of applications of drones, allowing the integration of different sensor devices and robotic manipulators to perform inspection and maintenance operations on infrastructures such as power lines, bridges, viaducts, or walls, involving typically physical interactions on flight. New research and technological challenges arise from applications demanding the benefits of aerial robots, particularly in outdoor environments. This book collects eleven papers from different research groups from Spain, Croatia, Italy, Japan, the USA, the Netherlands, and Denmark, focused on the design, development, and experimental validation of methods and technologies for inspection and maintenance using aerial robots

    BogieCopter: A Multi-Modal Aerial-Ground Vehicle for Long-Endurance Inspection Applications

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    The use of Micro Aerial Vehicles (MAVs) for inspection and surveillance missions has proved to be extremely useful, however, their usability is negatively impacted by the large power requirements and the limited operating time. This work describes the design and development of a novel hybrid aerial-ground vehicle, enabling multi-modal mobility and long operating time, suitable for long-endurance inspection and monitoring applications. The design consists of a MAV with two tiltable axles and four independent passive wheels, allowing it to fly, approach, land and move on flat and inclined surfaces, while using the same set of actuators for all modes of locomotion. In comparison to existing multi-modal designs with passive wheels, the proposed design enables a higher ground locomotion efficiency, provides a higher payload capacity, and presents one of the lowest mass increases due to the ground actuation mechanism. The vehicle's performance is evaluated through a series of real experiments, demonstrating its flying, ground locomotion and wall-climbing capabilities, and the energy consumption for all modes of locomotion is evaluated.Comment: This paper has been accepted for publication at the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA), London, 202

    Backstepping Control for a Tandem Rotor UAV Robot with Two 2-DOF Tiltable Coaxial Rotors

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    The study of a fully actuated multi-rotor UAV robot is very important in the field of infrastructure inspection because it needs a dexterous motion, such as hovering in a special fixed attitude, etc. This paper presents a backstepping control method for a simplified fully actuated model of a tandem-rotor UAV robot with two 2-DOF tiltable coaxial rotors. A MIMO vectorial backstepping approach is adopted here because the input distribution matrix is a square and nonsingular matrix. The two-stage control method based on the Lyapunov second method is presented to stabilize the position and attitude of the whole system. The static control allocation problem is also solved by using a Moore-Penrose pseudo-inverse. Finally, two simulations are demonstrated to verify the performance of the proposed control method, where one is a stabilizing problem in which all the desired position and attitude are to be constant, whereas the other is a trajectory tracking problem in which the desired positions are time-varying while the desired attitudes are to be constant
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