Designing Search and Rescue Robots towards Realistic User Requirements

Article Preview

Abstract:

In the event of a large crisis (think about typhoon Haiyan or the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami in Japan), a primordial task of the rescue services is the search for human survivors on the incident site. This is a complex and dangerous task, which often leads to loss of lives among the human crisis managers themselves. The introduction of unmanned search and rescue devices can offer a valuable tool to save human lives and to speed up the search and rescue process. In this context, the EU-FP7-ICARUS project [1] concentrates on the development of unmanned search and rescue technologies for detecting, locating and rescuing humans.A main factor which explains why there is so little robotic technology applied on the terrain in real-life search and rescue operations, is that the complex nature and difficult operating conditions of search and rescue operations pose heavy constraints on the mechanical design of the unmanned platforms. In this paper, we discuss the different user requirements which have an impact of the design of the mechanical systems (air, ground and marine robots). We show how these user requirements are obtained, how they are validated, how they lead to design specifications for operational prototypes which are tested in realistic operational conditions and we show how the final mechanical design specifications are derived from these different steps. An important aspect of all these design steps which is emphasized in this paper is to always keep the end-users (in this case the search and rescue workers) in the loop in order to come to realistic requirements and mechanical design specifications, ensuring the practical deployability [2] of the developed platforms.

You might also be interested in these eBooks

Info:

Periodical:

Pages:

612-617

Citation:

Online since:

October 2014

Export:

Price:

* - Corresponding Author

[1] G. De Cubber, D. Doroftei, D. Serrano, K. Chintamani, R. Sabino, S. Ourevitch, The EU-ICARUS project: developing assistive robotic tools for search and rescue operations, IEEE SSRR Symposium, (2013).

DOI: 10.1109/ssrr.2013.6719323

Google Scholar

[2] D. Doroftei, G. De Cubber, K. Chintamani, Towards collaborative human and robotic rescue workers, 5th International Workshop on Human-Friendly Robotics (HFR2012), October (2012).

Google Scholar

[3] S. Govindaraj, K. Chintamani, J. Gancet, P. Letier, B. Van Lierde, Y. Nevatia, G. De Cubber, D. Serrano, J. Bedkowski, C. Armbrust, J. Sanchez, A. Coelho, M.E. Palomares, I. Orbe, The ICARUS Project - Command, Control and Intelligence (C2I), IEEE SSRR, Sweden, October (2013).

DOI: 10.1109/ssrr.2013.6719356

Google Scholar

[4] Available on http: /www. fp7-icarus. eu/sites/fp7-icarus. eu/files/publications/D100-1%20v8. 0. pdf.

Google Scholar

[5] Information on http: /www. insarag. org/en/methodology/guidelines. html.

Google Scholar

[6] Available on http: /surveymonkey. com/s/ICARUS-USAR.

Google Scholar

[7] Available on http: /surveymonkey. com/s/ICARUS-MSAR.

Google Scholar

[8] G. De Cubber, D. Doroftei, Y. Baudoin, D. Serrano, K. Chintamani, R. Sabino, S. Ourevitch, Operational RPAS scenarios envisaged for search & rescue by the EU FP7 ICARUS project, Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems for Civil Operations (RPAS2012), December 4-5, (2012).

DOI: 10.1109/ssrr.2013.6719323

Google Scholar

[9] Available on http: /www. fp7-icarus. eu/icarus-presented-forum-do-mar-2012-presentations.

Google Scholar

[10] Information on http: /www. insarag. org/en/global-structures/team-leaders. html.

Google Scholar

[11] S. Leutenegger, M. Jabas, and R. Y. Siegwart, Solar Airplane Conceptual Design and Performance Estimation. Journal of Intelligent and Robotic Systems, Vol. 61, No. 1-4, pp.545-561.

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-007-1110-5_32

Google Scholar

[12] C. Armbrust, G. De Cubber, K. Berns: ICARUS –Control Systems for Search and Rescue Robots, Book on Field and Assistive Robotics, 2014, to be published.

Google Scholar

[13] A. Matos, E. Silva, N. Cruz, J.C. Alves, D.R. Almeida, M.A. Pinto, A. Martins, J.M. Almeida, D. Cabral Machado, Development of an Unmanned Capsule for Large-Scale Maritime Search and Rescue, MTS/IEEE OCEANS 2013, San Diego, September 2013, San Diego, USA.

Google Scholar

[14] S. Omari, M.D. Hua, G. Ducard, T. Hamel, Nonlinear Control of VTOL UAVs Incorporating Flapping Dynamics, IROS, (2013).

DOI: 10.1109/iros.2013.6696696

Google Scholar

[15] Information on http: /www. udt-global. com/files/marcello_zannini. pdf.

Google Scholar

[16] H. Balta, G. De Cubber, D. Doroftei, Y. Baudoin, H. Sahli, Terrain Traversability Analysis for off-road robots using Time-Of-Flight 3D Sensing, 7th IARP RISE Workshop, Saint-Petersburg, Russia, October (2013).

Google Scholar

[17] M. H. Chaudhary and B. Scheers. Progressive Decentralized TDMA Based MAC: Joint Optimization of Slot Allocation and Frame Lengths. In IEEE Mil. Com. Conf., San Diego, CA, USA, November (2013).

DOI: 10.1109/milcom.2013.40

Google Scholar

[18] J. Bedkowski, G. De Cubber, A. Maslowski, 6DSLAM with GPGPU computation, in Proc. Automation 2012, Warsaw, Poland, April (2012).

Google Scholar