Robots engineered for construction sites are in the news this week.
Namely, there is a robot called the In-situ Fabricator. Described as an
autonomous construction robot, one can put the accent on autonomous.
The
IF represents an important step in robotics designed for use in
construction. They are in brief being designed to be smarter. They are
more than factory-like machines that stand in one place and place
objects in piles but are engineered to move around and adapt to changing
situations.
A detailed report
from Jim Drury in Reuters focused on what is on the minds of engineers
at the Swiss National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR) Digital
Fabrication. The center is located at the ETH Zurich >campus.
The NCCR director, Prof. Matthias Kohler, said it was the first
machine that can actually go on construction sites and build nonstandard
designs. He referred to designs that vary and adapt to local conditions
in the building site.
Laying bricks in pre-programmed structures is not the central feature
in its repertoire. Sensors and onboard computing help it build up a 3D
site map. It has a 2D laser range finder which acts in conjunction with computer algorithms that construct the map.
Prof. Jonas Buchli, ETH Zurich, said two computers were on board, one
for the arm and one for the overall robot. Computers calculate
information for the robot to move and to know where it is. That
translates into robots moving around the sites unaided. They can adapt
on their own to minor design variations.
The robot can adapt to circumstances that were not planned—a dropped
builder's tool, a later design change. Prof. Jonas Buchli, who
supervises the research, told Reuters that roboticists in research find
construction sites interesting environments, "somewhere in between the
completely planned and controlled environment of a factory or a lab
floor, and the completely chaotic environment of outdoors."
Buchli said it was the kind of semi-structured environment where
researchers could test and develop the technology needed for robots to
move around and do useful things in such environments.
Drury also reported on programs under way:
The engineers are training a focus on "robotic aggregations of
materials with unpredictable geometry, in which random pieces of rubble
can be measured by robot and structured to fit together to make a complete standing structure."
Then there is the Mesh Mould project. This looks at a
digitally-controlled, 3D printed, extrusion process. In this one,
"robotically fabricated reinforcement meshes can be filled with
concrete, eliminating the need for formwork."
What about the usual worries that such machines will cost humans
jobs? Kohler does not see the construction-site robotics advancements as
harmfully either-or.
"I think this will become a game-changer in construction," he said in
Reuters. He sees mobile robots on the construction site in the next
five to ten years, but as actually collaborating with humans, "so the
best of each kind of skills come together."
Still, that did not stop Bryan Lufkin in Gizmodo from asking: "I wonder if more robots on construction sites would lead to a sharp drop in hard hat sales?"
SOURCE:
TechXplore



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