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Author
Stone, W. C. | Pfeffer, L. E.
Title
Automation Infrastructure System for a Robotic 30-Ton Bridge Crane.
Coporate
National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD
Book or Conf
Robotics 98 Conference Proceedings. American Society of Civil Engineers. April 26-30, 1998, Albuquerque, NM, 195-201 p., 1998
Keywords
robotics | bridges (structures) | construction | bridge cranes | construction automation | construction simulators | data telemetry | wireless jobsite communications
Identifiers
National Construction Automation Testbed; Stewart Platforms
Abstract
This paper describes the sensing portion of a system used to convert an existing 30-ton high bay bridge crane to computer control for automated placement of construction components. The system is being designed to permit either telepresent or fully autonomous assembly of representative parts of buildings and industrial plants, e.g., girders, tanks, and pipes. In order to achieve six degree-of-freedom manipulation of the components the traditional crane cable and hook have been replaced by TETRA, an inverted cable-operated Stewart platform equipped with various manipulators. The sensing systems are primarily displacement, force, and other state sensors. What makes this application unique is the scale of the robot: the crane's workspace is 40 m long, 23 m wide, and 24 m high - a volume of more than 10,000 cubic meters. This scale, and the need to operate without wires has led to a control system based on wireless packet communication by intelligent modules known as "smart pods." The pods interface to one or several force, displacement, or state sensors. The pods broadcast their data via wireless ethernet to base stations which then communicate with the world via a higher speed networks. The present paper discusses issues relating to the architecture of the sensor array needed to operate this large construction robot and the communications infrastructure needed to supply that information to remote sites in real time.