533 research outputs found

    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

    An Omnidirectional Aerial Manipulation Platform for Contact-Based Inspection

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    This paper presents an omnidirectional aerial manipulation platform for robust and responsive interaction with unstructured environments, toward the goal of contact-based inspection. The fully actuated tilt-rotor aerial system is equipped with a rigidly mounted end-effector, and is able to exert a 6 degree of freedom force and torque, decoupling the system's translational and rotational dynamics, and enabling precise interaction with the environment while maintaining stability. An impedance controller with selective apparent inertia is formulated to permit compliance in certain degrees of freedom while achieving precise trajectory tracking and disturbance rejection in others. Experiments demonstrate disturbance rejection, push-and-slide interaction, and on-board state estimation with depth servoing to interact with local surfaces. The system is also validated as a tool for contact-based non-destructive testing of concrete infrastructure.Comment: Accepted submission to Robotics: Science and Systems conference 2019. 9 pages, 12 figure

    A review of aerial manipulation of small-scale rotorcraft unmanned robotic systems

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    Small-scale rotorcraft unmanned robotic systems (SRURSs) are a kind of unmanned rotorcraft with manipulating devices. This review aims to provide an overview on aerial manipulation of SRURSs nowadays and promote relative research in the future. In the past decade, aerial manipulation of SRURSs has attracted the interest of researchers globally. This paper provides a literature review of the last 10 years (2008–2017) on SRURSs, and details achievements and challenges. Firstly, the definition, current state, development, classification, and challenges of SRURSs are introduced. Then, related papers are organized into two topical categories: mechanical structure design, and modeling and control. Following this, research groups involved in SRURS research and their major achievements are summarized and classified in the form of tables. The research groups are introduced in detail from seven parts. Finally, trends and challenges are compiled and presented to serve as a resource for researchers interested in aerial manipulation of SRURSs. The problem, trends, and challenges are described from three aspects. Conclusions of the paper are presented, and the future of SRURSs is discussed to enable further research interests

    A Human-Embodied Drone for Dexterous Aerial Manipulation

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    Current drones perform a wide variety of tasks in surveillance, photography, agriculture, package delivery, etc. However, these tasks are performed passively without the use of human interaction. Aerial manipulation shifts this paradigm and implements drones with robotic arms that allow interaction with the environment rather than simply sensing it. For example, in construction, aerial manipulation in conjunction with human interaction could allow operators to perform several tasks, such as hosing decks, drill into surfaces, and sealing cracks via a drone. This integration with drones will henceforth be known as dexterous aerial manipulation. Our recent work integrated the worker’s experience into aerial manipulation using haptic technology. The net effect was such a system could enable the worker to leverage drones and complete tasks while utilizing haptics on the task site remotely. However, the tasks were completed within the operator’s line-of-sight. Until now, immersive AR/VR frameworks has rarely been integrated in aerial manipulation. Yet, such a framework allows the drones to embody and transport the operator’s senses, actions, and presence to a remote location in real-time. As a result, the operator can both physically interact with the environment and socially interact with actual workers on the worksite. This dissertation presents a human-embodied drone interface for dexterous aerial manipulation. Using VR/AR technology, the interface allows the operator to leverage their intelligence to collaboratively perform desired tasks anytime, anywhere with a drone that possesses great dexterity

    A survey of single and multi-UAV aerial manipulation

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    Aerial manipulation has direct application prospects in environment, construction, forestry, agriculture, search, and rescue. It can be used to pick and place objects and hence can be used for transportation of goods. Aerial manipulation can be used to perform operations in environments inaccessible or unsafe for human workers. This paper is a survey of recent research in aerial manipulation. The aerial manipulation research has diverse aspects, which include the designing of aerial manipulation platforms, manipulators, grippers, the control of aerial platform and manipulators, the interaction of aerial manipulator with the environment, through forces and torque. In particular, the review paper presents the survey of the airborne platforms that can be used for aerial manipulation including the new aerial platforms with aerial manipulation capability. We also classified the aerial grippers and aerial manipulators based on their designs and characteristics. The recent contributions regarding the control of the aerial manipulator platform is also discussed. The environment interaction of aerial manipulators is also surveyed which includes, different strategies used for end-effectors interaction with the environment, application of force, application of torque and visual servoing. A recent and growing interest of researchers about the multi-UAV collaborative aerial manipulation was also noticed and hence different strategies for collaborative aerial manipulation are also surveyed, discussed and critically analyzed. Some key challenges regarding outdoor aerial manipulation and energy constraints in aerial manipulation are also discussed

    Aerial Robotic Solution for Detailed Inspection of Viaducts

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    The inspection of public infrastructure, such as viaducts and bridges, is crucial for their proper maintenance given the heavy use of many of them. Current inspection techniques are very costly and manual, requiring highly qualified personnel and involving many risks. This article presents a novel solution for the detailed inspection of viaducts using aerial robotic platforms. The system provides a highly automated visual inspection platform that does not rely on GPS and could even fly underneath the infrastructure. Unlike commercially available solutions, our system automatically references the inspection to a global coordinate system usable throughout the lifespan of the infrastructure. In addition, the system includes another aerial platform with a robotic arm to make contact inspections of detected defects, thus providing information that cannot be obtained only with images. Both aerial robotic platforms feature flexibility in the choice of camera or contact measurement sensors as the situation requires. The system was validated by performing inspection flights on real viaducts.Unión Europea H2020-2019-769066Unión Europea H2020-2020- 87154

    Design and control of next-generation uavs for effectively interacting with environments

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    In this dissertation, the design and control of a novel multirotor for aerial manipulation is studied, with the aim of endowing the aerial vehicle with more degrees of freedom of motion and stability when interacting with the environments. Firstly, it presents an energy-efficient adaptive robust tracking control method for a class of fully actuated, thrust vectoring unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) with parametric uncertainties including unknown moment of inertia, mass and center of mass, which would occur in aerial maneuvering and manipulation. The effectiveness of this method is demonstrated through simulation. Secondly, a humanoid robot arm is adopted to serve as a 6-degree-of-freedom (DOF) automated flight testing platform for emulating the free flight environment of UAVs while ensuring safety. Another novel multirotor in a tilt-rotor architecture is studied and tested for coping with parametric uncertainties in aerial maneuvering and manipulation. Two pairs of rotors are mounted on two independently-controlled tilting arms placed at two sides of the vehicle in a H configuration to enhance its maneuverability and stability through an adaptive robust control method. In addition, an impedance control algorithm is deployed in the out loop that modifies the trajectory to achieve a compliant behavior in the end-effector space for aerial drilling and screwing tasks

    Aerial Manipulators for Contact-based Interaction

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    Compliant aerial manipulation.

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    The aerial manipulation is a research field which proposes the integration of robotic manipulators in aerial platforms, typically multirotors – widely known as “drones” – or autonomous helicopters. The development of this technology is motivated by the convenience to reduce the time, cost and risk associated to the execution of certain operations or tasks in high altitude areas or difficult access workspaces. Some illustrative application examples are the detection and insulation of leaks in pipe structures in chemical plants, repairing the corrosion in the blades of wind turbines, the maintenance of power lines, or the installation and retrieval of sensor devices in polluted areas. Although nowadays it is possible to find a wide variety of commercial multirotor platforms with payloads from a few gramps up to several kilograms, and flight times around thirty minutes, the development of an aerial manipulator is still a technological challenge due to the strong requirements relative to the design of the manipulator in terms of very low weight, low inertia, dexterity, mechanical robustness and control. The main contribution of this thesis is the design, development and experimental validation of several prototypes of lightweight (<2 kg) and compliant manipulators to be integrated in multirotor platforms, including human-size dual arm systems, compliant joint arms equipped with human-like finger modules for grasping, and long reach aerial manipulators. Since it is expected that the aerial manipulator is capable to execute inspection and maintenance tasks in a similar way a human operator would do, this thesis proposes a bioinspired design approach, trying to replicate the human arm in terms of size, kinematics, mass distribution, and compliance. This last feature is actually one of the key concepts developed and exploited in this work. Introducing a flexible element such as springs or elastomers between the servos and the links extends the capabilities of the manipulator, allowing the estimation and control of the torque/force, the detection of impacts and overloads, or the localization of obstacles by contact. It also improves safety and efficiency of the manipulator, especially during the operation on flight or in grabbing situations, where the impacts and contact forces may damage the manipulator or destabilize the aerial platform. Unlike most industrial manipulators, where force-torque control is possible at control rates above 1 kHz, the servo actuators typically employed in the development of aerial manipulators present important technological limitations: no torque feedback nor control, only position (and in some models, speed) references, low update rates (<100 Hz), and communication delays. However, these devices are still the best solution due to their high torque to weight ratio, low cost, compact design, and easy assembly and integration. In order to cope with these limitations, the compliant joint arms presented here estimate and control the wrenches from the deflection of the spring-lever transmission mechanism introduced in the joints, measured at joint level with encoders or potentiometers, or in the Cartesian space employing vision sensors. Note that in the developed prototypes, the maximum joint deflection is around 25 degrees, which corresponds to a deviation in the position of the end effector around 20 cm for a human-size arm. The capabilities and functionalities of the manipulators have been evaluated in fixed base test-bench firstly, and then in outdoor flight tests, integrating the arms in different commercial hexarotor platforms. Frequency characterization, position/force/impedance control, bimanual grasping, arm teleoperation, payload mass estimation, or contact-based obstacle localization are some of the experiments presented in this thesis that validate the developed prototypes.La manipulación aérea es un campo de investigación que propone la integración de manipuladores robóticos in plataformas aéreas, típicamente multirotores – comúnmente conocidos como “drones” – o helicópteros autónomos. El desarrollo de esta tecnología está motivada por la conveniencia de reducir el tiempo, coste y riesgo asociado a la ejecución de ciertas operaciones o tareas en áreas de gran altura o espacios de trabajo de difícil acceso. Algunos ejemplos ilustrativos de aplicaciones son la detección y aislamiento de fugas en estructura de tuberías en plantas químicas, la reparación de la corrosión en las palas de aerogeneradores, el mantenimiento de líneas eléctricas, o la instalación y recuperación de sensores en zonas contaminadas. Aunque hoy en día es posible encontrar una amplia variedad de plataformas multirotor comerciales con cargas de pago desde unos pocos gramos hasta varios kilogramos, y tiempo de vuelo entorno a treinta minutos, el desarrollo de los manipuladores aéreos es todavía un desafío tecnológico debido a los exigentes requisitos relativos al diseño del manipulador en términos de muy bajo peso, baja inercia, destreza, robustez mecánica y control. La contribución principal de esta tesis es el diseño, desarrollo y validación experimental de varios prototipos de manipuladores de bajo peso (<2 kg) con capacidad de acomodación (“compliant”) para su integración en plataformas aéreas multirotor, incluyendo sistemas bi-brazo de tamaño humano, brazos robóticos de articulaciones flexibles con dedos antropomórficos para agarre, y manipuladores aéreos de largo alcance. Puesto que se prevé que el manipulador aéreo sea capaz de ejecutar tareas de inspección y mantenimiento de forma similar a como lo haría un operador humano, esta tesis propone un enfoque de diseño bio-inspirado, tratando de replicar el brazo humano en cuanto a tamaño, cinemática, distribución de masas y flexibilidad. Esta característica es de hecho uno de los conceptos clave desarrollados y utilizados en este trabajo. Al introducir un elemento elástico como los muelles o elastómeros entre el los actuadores y los enlaces se aumenta las capacidades del manipulador, permitiendo la estimación y control de las fuerzas y pares, la detección de impactos y sobrecargas, o la localización de obstáculos por contacto. Además mejora la seguridad y eficiencia del manipulador, especialmente durante las operaciones en vuelo, donde los impactos y fuerzas de contacto pueden dañar el manipulador o desestabilizar la plataforma aérea. A diferencia de la mayoría de manipuladores industriales, donde el control de fuerzas y pares es posible a tasas por encima de 1 kHz, los servo motores típicamente utilizados en el desarrollo de manipuladores aéreos presentan importantes limitaciones tecnológicas: no hay realimentación ni control de torque, sólo admiten referencias de posición (o bien de velocidad), y presentan retrasos de comunicación. Sin embargo, estos dispositivos son todavía la mejor solución debido al alto ratio de torque a peso, por su bajo peso, diseño compacto y facilidad de ensamblado e integración. Para suplir estas limitaciones, los brazos robóticos flexibles presentados aquí permiten estimar y controlar las fuerzas a partir de la deflexión del mecanismo de muelle-palanca introducido en las articulaciones, medida a nivel articular mediante potenciómetros o codificadores, o en espacio Cartesiano mediante sensores de visión. Tómese como referencia que en los prototipos desarrollados la máxima deflexión articular es de unos 25 grados, lo que corresponde a una desviación de posición en torno a 20 cm en el efector final para un brazo de tamaño humano. Las capacidades y funcionalidades de estos manipuladores se han evaluado en base fija primero, y luego en vuelos en exteriores, integrando los brazos en diferentes plataformas hexartor comerciales. Caracterización frecuencial, control de posición/fuerza/impedancia, agarre bimanual, teleoperación de brazos, estimación de carga, o la localización de obstáculos mediante contacto son algunos de los experimentos presentados en esta tesis para validar los prototipos desarrollados por el auto
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