Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Brunel University London, Kingston Lane, Uxbridge UB8 3PH, UK
2. TWI Technology Centre (Wales), Harbourside Business Park, Harbourside Rd, Port Talbot SA13 1SB, UK
Abstract
Within the domain of robotic non-destructive testing (NDT) of complex structures, the existing methods typically utilise an offline robot-path-planning strategy. Commonly, for robotic inspection, this will involve full coverage of the component. An NDT probe oriented normal to the component surface is deployed in a raster scan pattern. Here, digital models are used, with the user decomposing complex structures into manageable scan path segments, while carefully avoiding obstacles and other geometric features. This is a manual process that requires a highly skilled robotic operator, often taking several hours or days to refine. This introduces several challenges to NDT, including the need for an accurate model of the component (which, for NDT inspection, is often not available), the requirement of skilled personnel, and careful consideration of both the NDT inspection method and the geometric structure of the component. This paper addresses the specific challenge of scanning complex surfaces by using an automated approach. An algorithm is presented, which is able to learn an efficient scan path by taking into account the dimensional constraints of the footprint of an ultrasonic phased-array probe (a common inspection method for NDT) and the surface geometry. The proposed solution harnesses a digital model of the component, which is decomposed into a series of connected nodes representing the NDT inspection points within the NDT process—this step utilises graph theory. The connections to other nodes are determined using nearest neighbour with KD-Tree optimisation to improve the efficiency of node traversal. This enables a trade-off between simplicity and efficiency. Next, movement restrictions are introduced to allow the robot to navigate the surface of a component in a three-dimensional space, defining obstacles as prohibited areas, explicitly. Our solution entails a two-stage planning process, as follows: a modified three-dimensional flood fill is combined with Dijkstra’s shortest path algorithm. The process is repeated iteratively until the entire surface is covered. The efficiency of this proposed approach is evaluated through simulations. The technique presented in this paper provides an improved and automated method for NDT robotic inspection, reducing the requirement of skilled robotic path-planning personnel while ensuring full component coverage.
Funder
the Welsh European Funding Office
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Control and Optimization,Mechanical Engineering,Computer Science (miscellaneous),Control and Systems Engineering
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