Title :
Investigation of reliability of hydraulic-robots for hazardous environments using analytic redundancy
Author :
Leuschen, Martin L. ; Walker, Ian D. ; Cavallaro, Joseph R.
Author_Institution :
Rice Univ., Houston, TX, USA
Abstract :
The Rosie mobile worksystem is a robot that is on the cutting edge of hazardous environment robotics. It is a heavy-duty hydraulic robot designed for nuclear reactor decontamination and dismantlement. The robot consists of a wheeled platform containing a central hydraulic power supply powered by an electric tether, four independently steerable wheels, and a heavy-duty crane/manipulator. The hydraulic wheel actuator subsystem has been determined to be a vital component of the mobile platform through reliability analysis. Our research into analyzing this robot´s reliability through the technique of analytical redundancy (AR) will help provide the Department of Energy (DOE) with a more complete and effective set of tests for monitoring and diagnostics of the Rosie system. In this paper, we discuss the derivation through AR of a suite of model based tests for the default sensor package for one of Rosie´s wheel actuators. AR allows us to exploit the sensor information of the sensors values and the system model to derive tests of the consistency of the sensor data. Some of these tests are comparison of the actual system response to control inputs to predicted response indicated by the model, the other tests uncovered by the AR analysis reflect higher order state interdependencies. These tests and their use in monitoring and diagnostics for Rosie are detailed and examined in depth. This work is also an interesting example of the application of model based techniques for an important class of practical systems
Keywords :
fission reactor decommissioning; industrial robots; mobile robots; redundancy; reliability; Department of Energy; Rosie mobile worksystem; actual system response; analytic redundancy; central hydraulic power supply; control inputs; default sensor package; diagnostics; electric tether; hazardous environments; heavy-duty crane/manipulator; higher order state interdependencies; hydraulic wheel actuator subsystem; hydraulic-robots; independently steerable wheels; model based techniques; monitoring; nuclear reactor decontamination; nuclear reactor dismantlement; predicted response; reliability; wheeled platform; Decontamination; Fission reactors; Independent component analysis; Mobile robots; Monitoring; Power supplies; Power system reliability; Sensor systems; System testing; Wheels;
Conference_Titel :
Reliability and Maintainability Symposium, 1999. Proceedings. Annual
Conference_Location :
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-5143-6
DOI :
10.1109/RAMS.1999.744107