Josef Franko’s research while affiliated with FH Aachen and other places

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Publications (1)


Wind farm maintenance vision.
Climbing ring robot, SMART (Scanning, Monitoring, Analyzing, Repair and Transportation).
Design studies scaled by 1:20: (a) belt climbing ring robot; (b) Lego based design; (c) crawlers with scissors; (d) final concept.
Climbing ring robot (CRR) demonstrator 2016 (a); CRR demonstrator 2018 (b). Both are scaled by a factor of 1:3 regarding a 2.5 MW wind turbine.
Climbing ring robot (scaled 1:3).

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Design of a Multi-Robot System for Wind Turbine Maintenance
  • Article
  • Full-text available

May 2020

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134 Reads

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54 Citations

Josef Franko

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The maintenance of wind turbines is of growing importance considering the transition to renewable energy. This paper presents a multi-robot-approach for automated wind turbine maintenance including a novel climbing robot. Currently, wind turbine maintenance remains a manual task, which is monotonous, dangerous, and also physically demanding due to the large scale of wind turbines. Technical climbers are required to work at significant heights, even in bad weather conditions. Furthermore, a skilled labor force with sufficient knowledge in repairing fiber composite material is rare. Autonomous mobile systems enable the digitization of the maintenance process. They can be designed for weather-independent operations. This work contributes to the development and experimental validation of a maintenance system consisting of multiple robotic platforms for a variety of tasks, such as wind turbine tower and rotor blade service. In this work, multicopters with vision and LiDAR sensors for global inspection are used to guide slower climbing robots. Light-weight magnetic climbers with surface contact were used to analyze structure parts with non-destructive inspection methods and to locally repair smaller defects. Localization was enabled by adapting odometry for conical-shaped surfaces considering additional navigation sensors. Magnets were suitable for steel towers to clamp onto the surface. A friction-based climbing ring robot (SMART— Scanning, Monitoring, Analyzing, Repair and Transportation) completed the set-up for higher payload. The maintenance period could be extended by using weather-proofed maintenance robots. The multi-robot-system was running the Robot Operating System (ROS). Additionally, first steps towards machine learning would enable maintenance staff to use pattern classification for fault diagnosis in order to operate safely from the ground in the future.

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Citations (1)


... Some researchers swapped the grasping mechanisms with wheels, sacrificing obstacle avoidance abilities and flexibility for climbing stability, electromechanical simplicity, and climbing speed. Many robots such as UT-PCR [9] and others [10], [11] had successfully demonstrated wheeled vertical climbing of poles and trees, sometimes at the expense of climbing surface integrity [12], [13]. Others like RETOV [14] and [15] had the capability to rotate about the column axis, allowing more efficient column navigation. ...

Reference:

Advances in Hybrid Modular Climbing Robots: Design Principles and Refinement Strategies
Design of a Multi-Robot System for Wind Turbine Maintenance