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Engineers Edge - Industrial pipe systems can be complex, narrow, and generally inaccessible. Pipe installations can have vertical, horizontal, and oblique junctions. Critical pipe installations must be inspected for leakage areas, obstructions, valve failures and more. Moreover, industrial pipe systems require periodic cleaning
In general, today’s pipe inspection and cleaning systems (Pipeline Pigs or pigging) are not that clever. They generally cannot climb or navigate in vertical pipes and very few can negotiate complex intersections or joints. Navigation by light and image Cybernetics and optical measurement scientists at SINTEF are working on a robotic solution to inspecting and cleaning complex pipe installations. With the knowledge and experience derived from snake robots Anna Konda and AiKo, the team is now developing an intelligent pipe inspection robot that will be able to climb, navigate intersections and know its location within a pipe system. The inspection robot will be developed to move within pipe systems of various diameters; right down to 20 cm. Cybernetics scientists are developing the propulsion system while a team of optics scientists is working on the new robot’s visual system.
“We are currently developing the vision system than will enable the robot to navigate,” says Jens Thielemann at SINTEF ICT. “In the meantime, we are using the lego robot Mindstormer to collect the data to train the vision system. This lego robot has a camera attached and moves around the pipe following a pre-programmed map. The next step will be to utilize the vision system as input to control the actual snake robot we are going to develop.”
The camera that will provide the new robot’s vision is an off the shelf time-of-flight camera that provides a bathymetric chart of the pipe system using inflected light. “Combined with our algorithms, the robot will be able to navigate and move forward on its own,” says Thielemann. “The robot knows when a left or right turn is approaching and also contains a built-in path description detailing what tasks it should carry out in different situations.
Operates like a train
“Given our previous work on snake robots, we have become good at controlling mechanisms that are linked,” says SINTEF cybernetics scientist Erik Kyrkjebø.
“We now want to develop a robot with 10-11 joint modules, each with an identical pair of wheels cast in plastic. The weight must be well distributed between the joints. For example, can we put the camera and accelerator motor in two different joint modules? The robot will function as a train when operating horizontally. Such robots already exist, but we want to develop a robot that can climb too.” The scientists have designed several versions of the pipe inspection robot and have tested different solutions in order to make the new robot both mobile and compact. They have now come up with a design they have faith in.
Twisting upwards
When the robot enters a vertical pipe, it lifts its head in the pipe and meets the pipe wall. It can then either move sideways with its abdomen against the pipe and twist itself upwards or it can topple backwards, attach itself to the pipe wall, in the same way as we would put our feet against a shaft wall to hold on, and then roll upwards.
The scientists emphasize that the project is at the design stage. In June, two of the 11 joint modules will be tested to verify the concept and they hope to demonstrate a prototype model by the end of the year. This comprises just phase one of an industrial development, but the enthusiastic scientists are confident of succeeding in the foreseeable future. The final version of the robot will be constructed of aluminum and is planned to be 1.5 m long. Image: The new robot functions as a train in horizontal pipes but maneuvers sideways into a vertical pipe and twists vertically upwards. (Credit: Illustration by SINTEF, ICT) Adapted from materials provided by SINTEF, via AlphaGalileo
Related Resource: Pipeline Pigs Pigging
Modified by Administrator at Thu, Jul 10, 2008, 08:05:33
07/08/2008, 10:50:54
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