Paper
12 August 1998 Development of a high-mobility wheeled robot for humanitarian mine clearance
Eric Colon, Paul Alexandre, Jerome Weemaels, Ioan Doroftei
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Antipersonal mines kill or mutilate tens of people every day. Military mine clearance methods make use of heavy vehicles and cannot achieve a satisfying destruction percentage. Consequently, humanitarian deminers use the classical manual methods. This work is very tedious, dangerous and costly. The detection is not always reliable and is very slow. Improvements can be made by developing new sensors and by automating the detection sequence. The Robotics workgroup of the Belgian Hudem '97 project focuses on the development of low cost vehicles that could be equipped with mine detectors. In this paper, we first review the main characteristics of such platforms. We then show that the architecture of the vehicle is also determined by the chosen detection strategy. Afterwards, we describe in detail the original wheeled vehicle we are building. Its main characteristic is a very high mobility given by the 3 drive/steer wheels. The low-level control is made by a microcontroller, while paths are generated by the remote computer. Preliminary indoor test have demonstrated the potentialities of this vehicle.
© (1998) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Eric Colon, Paul Alexandre, Jerome Weemaels, and Ioan Doroftei "Development of a high-mobility wheeled robot for humanitarian mine clearance", Proc. SPIE 3366, Robotic and Semi-Robotic Ground Vehicle Technology, (12 August 1998); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.317539
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CITATIONS
Cited by 8 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Land mines

Sensors

Control systems

Mining

Infrared sensors

Microcontrollers

Magnetic sensors

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