An experimental new undersea robotic reveals nice promise to be used within the repairs of offshore renewable power platforms. As a result of it has the power to climb vertical underwater surfaces – and paint them – it is often called the Crawfish.
Whether or not they’re harnessing the facility of the wind, tidal currents or waves, offshore power buildings require common inspection, upkeep, and repairs. Divers are usually recruited to carry out the underwater points of those jobs, though utilizing such personnel might be expensive and time-consuming … to not point out dangerous to the divers themselves.
That is the place the Crawfish is available in. Developed by scientists at Germany’s Fraunhofer Sensible Ocean Applied sciences analysis group, the tethered system is definitely made up of two linked elements.
On high is a commercially accessible BlueROV2 remotely operated car made by California-based firm Blue Robotics. On the underside is a crawler unit which options 4 direct-drive elastomer wheels together with a wide range of instruments reminiscent of a digicam, brush, and particular sensor-reading head.

Fraunhofer
As a result of the robotic weighs simply 22 kg (48.5 lb), it may be lowered into the water by two or three human staff – no crane is required. As soon as the system is underwater, a topside operator remotely steers it over to the construction using the BlueROV2’s digicam and thrusters.
Upon reaching the vertical floor of the platform, the BlueROV’s thrusters apply as much as 90 Newtons (20 lb-force/9 kg-force) of “downward” drive (or horizontal drive, relying on the way you take a look at it), conserving the Crawfish held firmly in place. The robotic then makes its manner alongside the floor utilizing its powered wheels.
Because the bot does so, its digicam is used to remotely examine for harm to the construction’s anti-corrosion paint, whereas its reader head is used to wirelessly receive information from CoMoBelt sensor collars positioned at numerous factors on the platform. These collars, that are made by Fraunhofer, detect cracks in seam welds through built-in ultrasonic transceivers.
If harm to the paint is detected, it may be patched utilizing a two-part coating materials which is injected into the robotic’s remotely operated brush. Defective welds may conceivably even be fastened utilizing an onboard welding head.
In its present type, the Crawfish can descend to a most depth of fifty m (164 ft) and is ready to crawl (utilizing 50 Newtons of downforce) for 25 minutes per battery-charge. You may see it in free-swimming and structure-crawling motion, within the video under.
Fraunhofer Crawfish offshore power platform robotic
Supply: Fraunhofer