ROSYDec 30, 2020

Design, Characterization, and Control of a Size Adaptable In-pipe Robot for Water Distribution Systems

arXiv:2012.15236v211 citations
AI Analysis

This research provides an incremental improvement in the stability and control of in-pipe robots for leak detection and water quality monitoring in water distribution systems.

This paper focuses on the design and control of a size-adaptable in-pipe robot for water distribution systems, specifically addressing challenges in highly pressurized environments with high-speed flow. The robot's LQR-PID controller maintains stability, showing rotational velocity margins of -4 to +3 degrees/sec in co-simulation and tracking desired velocities (0.1-0.35 m/s) with 2-degree oscillation margins in experimental tests.

Leak detection and water quality monitoring are requirements and challenging tasks in Water Distribution Systems (WDS). In-line robots are designed for this aim. In our previous work, we designed an in-pipe robot [1]. In this research, we present the design of the central processor, characterize and control the robot based on the condition of operation in a highly pressurized environment of pipelines with the presence of high-speed flow. To this aim, an extreme operation condition is simulated with computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and the spring mechanism is characterized to ensure sufficient stabilizing force during operation based on the extreme operating condition. Also, an end-to-end method is suggested for power considerations for our robot that calculates minimum battery capacity and operation duration in the extreme operating condition. Finally, we design a novel LQR-PID based controller based on the system auxiliary matrices that retain the robot stability inside the pipeline against disturbances and uncertainties during operation. The ADAMS-MATLAB co-simulation of the robot-controller shows the rotational velocity with -4 degree/sec and +3 degree/sec margin around x, y, and z axes while the system tracks different desired velocities in pipelines (i.e. 0.12m/s, 0.17m/s, and 0.35m/s). Also, experimental results for four iterations in a 14-inch diameter PVC pipe show that the controller brings initial values of stabilizing states to zero and oscillate around it with a margin of 2 degrees and the system tracks desired velocities of 0.1m/s, 0.2m/s, 0.3m/s, and 0.35m/s in which makes the robot dexterous in uncertain and highly disturbed the environment of pipelines during operation.

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