Engineering Magazine: Fall 2019

Page 22

FLYOVERS AID AGRICULTURE Kenji Shimada, professor of mechanical engineering, and his team of engineers are using drones to detect damage in agricultural water canals in a town in Niigata, an agricultural district on the northwest coast of Japan. These canals that total approximately 40,000 kilometers throughout Japan are essential for the rice farming economy. Damage to the canals accumulates due to age, earthquakes, and extreme weather. They can only be analyzed and repaired during the annual two-month dry season. Of these two months, one and a half are devoted to laborious inspections by technicians who walk along the canals to manually identify, measure, and record damage. This leaves only two weeks for repairs. “Forty thousand kilometers are equivalent to the equatorial circumference

of stone exposed, so these were the places

subgraphs, which represent the areas they

of Earth, and the manual labor for

we needed to repair.”

will cover. The team also graphs the roads

Using public maps and research data,

to generate a route for the car that is within

water canals is enormous. We automate

the researchers formulated an algorithm

communication distance of the drones. The

the work by flying autonomous drones

to plan the drones’ path along the canals.

cars are programmed to automatically find

equipped with high-resolution cameras

They can fly along different sized canals in

alternative routes if faced with traffic.

that detect cracks and wear with machine-

multiple directions to record video of the

The team presented their research at

learning algorithms,” said Shimada.

walls for crack detection. The commercial

the International Conference on Intelligent

drone they used is limited to thirty minutes

Robots and Systems (IROS) last October.

a systematic framework with a fleet of

in the air and it must stay within a range

In the future, they plan to tackle potential

drones and cars to effectively assess the

of a few kilometers from the remote

road blocks. Additional challenges to this

canals, extending the coverage area and

controllers. This makes it impossible for the

project include potential vehicle collisions,

minimizing inspection time. Di Deng, a Ph.D.

drones to cover all of the canal in one flight.

aerial constraints (such as flying zones,

candidate in mechanical engineering, works

To ameliorate these limitations, the drones

aerial traffic, and other regulations), and

on the coverage planning aspect of the

are paired with cars that are strategically

inaccurate maps and measurements. A

project. Last year, she traveled to Japan to

parked to provide batteries and pick up the

long-term goal is to develop large-scale

conduct field tests.

drones when needed.

automated vehicle planning.

inspecting and evaluating the condition of

Shimada and his team have developed

“Over the summer, we flew our

Once the drones have recorded video

“We believe that this type of technology is

autonomous drone and tried different

of the entire canal, the data from the

critical to keeping the aging infrastructures

sizes of water canals, so the system can

images is fed into a neural network to

healthy and safe—it enables faster,

automatically decide the position of the

detect damaged areas and map them in

cheaper, and more regular inspection and

drone inside the water canals,” said Deng.

CAD models. To plan paths for the drones,

monitoring,” said Shimada.

“We tried out canals that go from 2.4 to 5

a scaled map of a canal is converted to

meters in width. We could clearly see a lot

a graph. This graph is then divided into


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Engineering Magazine: Fall 2019 by CMUEngineering - Issuu