Lessons learned: Symbiotic autonomous robot ecosystem for nuclear environments
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Published:2023-12
Issue:4
Volume:5
Page:
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ISSN:2631-6315
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Container-title:IET Cyber-Systems and Robotics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:IET Cyber-Syst and Robotics
Author:
Mitchell Daniel1ORCID, Emor Baniqued Paul Dominick2ORCID, Zahid Abdul1, West Andrew2ORCID, Nouri Rahmat Abadi Bahman2, Lennox Barry2ORCID, Liu Bin1, Kizilkaya Burak1ORCID, Flynn David1ORCID, Francis David John1, Pulgarin Erwin Jose Lopez2, Zhao Guodong1ORCID, Kivrak Hasan2ORCID, Blanche Jamie Rowland Douglas1ORCID, David Jennifer3, Wang Jingyan1ORCID, Bolarinwa Joseph3, Yao Kanzhong2, Groves Keir2, Qi Liyuan1, Shawky Mahmoud A.1ORCID, Giuliani Manuel3ORCID, Sandison Melissa2, Popoola Olaoluwa1ORCID, Marjanovic Ognjen2ORCID, Bremner Paul3ORCID, Harper Samuel Thomas1ORCID, Nandakumar Shivoh4, Watson Simon2ORCID, Agrawal Subham3, Lim Theodore4ORCID, Johnson Thomas2ORCID, Ahmad Wasim1ORCID, Xu Xiangmin1ORCID, Meng Zhen1, Jiang Zhengyi2ORCID
Affiliation:
1. James Watt School of Engineering Autonomous Systems and Connectivity Division University of Glasgow Glasgow UK 2. Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering The University of Manchester Manchester UK 3. Bristol Robotics Laboratory University of the West of England Bristol UK 4. Heriot‐Watt University Edinburgh UK
Abstract
AbstractNuclear facilities have a regulatory requirement to measure radiation levels within Post Operational Clean Out (POCO) around nuclear facilities each year, resulting in a trend towards robotic deployments to gain an improved understanding during nuclear decommissioning phases. The UK Nuclear Decommissioning Authority supports the view that human‐in‐the‐loop (HITL) robotic deployments are a solution to improve procedures and reduce risks within radiation characterisation of nuclear sites. The authors present a novel implementation of a Cyber‐Physical System (CPS) deployed in an analogue nuclear environment, comprised of a multi‐robot (MR) team coordinated by a HITL operator through a digital twin interface. The development of the CPS created efficient partnerships across systems including robots, digital systems and human. This was presented as a multi‐staged mission within an inspection scenario for the heterogeneous Symbiotic Multi‐Robot Fleet (SMuRF). Symbiotic interactions were achieved across the SMuRF where robots utilised automated collaborative governance to work together, where a single robot would face challenges in full characterisation of radiation. Key contributions include the demonstration of symbiotic autonomy and query‐based learning of an autonomous mission supporting scalable autonomy and autonomy as a service. The coordination of the CPS was a success and displayed further challenges and improvements related to future MR fleets.
Funder
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Publisher
Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET)
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Computational Theory and Mathematics,Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Human-Computer Interaction,Information Systems
Reference126 articles.
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