“They brick, drill, clean: Robots could revolutionize
building and, above all, take on monotonous and dangerous tasks - if it weren't
for a few problems.
Hadrian looks like a truck-mounted crane, but he builds like
a world champion. The star of the Australian company FBR manages 200
extra-large blocks of aerated concrete or clay per hour. This corresponds to
2200 manually laid standard bricks. Hadrian just pulled up the walls of an
entire daycare center in Perth in 57 hours. Even the best bricklayers cannot
achieve such values. And the construction robot should be much faster: a model
with a laying speed of 1000 blocks per hour is in development. Hadrian reads
the correct position of the bricks from stored 3D construction plans. He not
only layers the elements, but also cuts them to the required length if
necessary - without human intervention, but with the highest precision.
Automation in construction will experience a boom, says Sami
Atiya. "Anyone who walks through a construction site with trained eyes
sees the enormous potential for efficiency." The robotics boss of the
global technology company ABB doesn't just mean the time and cost savings.
According to a survey by the group, 91 percent of 1900 construction companies
surveyed in Europe, the USA and China expect a shortage of skilled workers in
the next ten years. Robots could fill that void. Above all, repetitive,
dangerous or unhealthy work could be carried out by autonomous, i.e.
independently acting, machines. For example, demolition work that releases
asbestos or lifting and transporting cement sacks.
The problem: Every construction site is different and,
moreover, is constantly changing
To do this, however, the artificial workers have to move
freely and find their way around the construction site. This is a challenge for
robots, which up to now have mostly monotonously carried out the same work
steps in a controlled factory environment in mass production. Because every
construction site is different and on top of that changes every day. Sometimes
the ground is dry, sometimes it is muddy after a downpour. Where there was soil
yesterday, there is a hole for a shaft today. In addition, there are always
deviations between planning and construction site reality. It is enough if a
door is installed offset by half a meter to literally let the robot run against
the wall.
But robots are getting smarter and smarter. Sensors,
scanners, cameras and image processing programs help you to find your way
around even in changeable surroundings and to master new, demanding tasks.
In autumn 2020, the tool manufacturer Hilti presented
Jaibot, its semi-autonomous construction site robot for drilling ceilings, for
the first time. Although it still has to be navigated through the construction
site by remote control, the robot identifies the drilling jobs within its range
on site, executes them automatically and marks them in color for the various
trades.
Robots could help with overhead work in particular
In particular, it relieves the craftsmen in the heating, air
conditioning and ventilation sectors with repetitive, physically strenuous
work.
"We looked at which routine work on the construction site is one of
the most stressful, and that is primarily the overhead work," says Julia
Zanona, Product Manager for Robotics at Hilti.
In order to be able to carry out
its tasks accurately, i.e. to drill the holes in the right places in the
required size and depth, Jaibot uses special data.
With Building Information Modeling, or BIM for short, all
data of a building - work plans, chronological sequence of the work of the
various trades, plan changes, information about materials, maintenance dates -
are fed into a digital database, networked and constantly updated. The
information relates to the entire life cycle of a structure from design through
construction to operation. All project partners can access it in the cloud.
That means: everyone involved in the construction and operation of the building
has an insight into all work steps and processes at all times. Everyone is
always up to date - including Jaibot.
However, this knowledge alone is of no use to the robot; it
has to connect it to its control system in order to be able to act
autonomously. A team of researchers at the Fraunhofer Italia Innovation
Engineering Center in Bolzano has developed such a software interface. ROSBIM
connects BIM with the "Robot Operating System", or ROS for short. The
aim of the researchers is to make optimal use of building data that are already
available digitally on the construction site. For example, for the transport of
heavy loads such as building material or tools with an autonomous, mobile
robot.
Husky A200 is designed for harsh environments
In Bolzano, the team is training with the commercially
available Husky A200 robot carrier platform. Husky A200 is designed for harsh
environments, rolls on wide tread tires and is equipped, among other things,
with laser and inclination sensors that help it to navigate in rough terrain.
Nevertheless, Husky still has a lot to learn.
"A person can react intuitively to sudden changes in
their environment, the robot has to access its sensor data," explains
Michael Terzer, research associate on the ROSBIM project. As an example, he
cites a hole in the ground that many environmental scan sensors could not
detect. It is stored in the data that the hole, for example an elevator shaft,
is open on a certain day for maintenance purposes and must be bypassed.
"Such time-dependent data, which a robot cannot detect with the help of
its sensors, is received via the interface," says Terzer.
Together with colleagues from the Fraunhofer Institute for
Industrial Engineering (IAO) in Stuttgart, the Bozen-based Fraunhofer team
developed Balto, an autonomous disinfection robot named after a sled dog that
brought urgently needed vaccine serums to an area of Alaska that was
difficult to access a hundred years ago. Balto is also equipped with ROSBIM and
can therefore react to its surroundings. For example, in order to thoroughly
disinfect all door handles in a hospital, he has to know where and at what
height they are, what material they are made of and how often they are used.
The robot can read this information from the data and select the optimal
disinfectant.
"You don't need to feed Balto with coordinates, you can
commission the disinfection of a whole class of objects," says Günter
Wenzel, head of department at Fraunhofer IAO. Instead of having to give the
robot the location details of each door handle to be disinfected, a general
order such as: All heavily used door handles should be disinfected with a
frequency of X minutes. Balto also plans his disinfection route himself.
Because of the transmitted data, he knows in which room and at what time a
meeting is taking place.
Who is actually liable if something goes wrong?
According to the researchers, the ROSBIM interface is also
important for human-robot interaction. If Balto encounters one or more people,
he should evade. If this is not possible, he stops. However, it would be bad if
he stopped in an escape route of all places and blocked it. However, since the
course of the escape routes is also recorded in the BIM data, such situations
can be avoided.
The interface can not only be used on one side, but in two
directions. The robot can report its work progress to the system and coordinate
disinfection tasks with other Balto colleagues.
Balto is by no means limited to his current area of
responsibility, but can also combine disinfection with cleaning and even take
on tasks in the field of construction site monitoring and building maintenance
in the long term. For the time being, the prototype is only working in the NOI
technology park in Bolzano, monitored by the research team. Further
demonstrators are in use in the Future Work Lab at Fraunhofer IAO and in the
Center for Virtual Engineering.
The question arises: Will autonomous robots replace the
worker on the construction site, the cleaner or the maintenance technician in
the foreseeable future? "Do not replace, but support," says Michael
Terzer. "In order to be able to use the technology on a large scale, it
still needs a lot of further development and that will take time." Aspects
of liability would also have to be clarified first. So it remains exciting."
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