The Asian Age

3D- printed, driverless boats developed

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Boston, May 24: MIT scientists have designed a fleet of 3D- printed, driverless boats that could ferry goods and people, helping clear up road congestion in waterway- rich cities such as Amsterdam, Bangkok and Venice — where canals run alongside and under bustling streets and bridges.

The autonomous boats offer high maneuverab­ility and precise control. They can be built using low- cost printer, making mass manufactur­ing more feasible.

In the future, the researcher­s also envision the driverless boats being adapted to perform city services overnight, instead of during busy daylight hours, further reducing congestion on both roads and canals.

“Imagine shifting some of infrastruc­ture services that usually take place during the day on the road — deliveries, garbage management, waste management - to the middle of the night, on the water, using a fleet of autonomous boats," said Daniela Rus, from Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology ( MIT) in the US.

The boats — rectangula­r 4- by- 2- metre hulls equipped with sensors, microcontr­ollers, location trackers, and other hardware — could be programmed to self- assemble into floating bridges, concert stages, platforms for food markets, and other structures in a matter of hours.

“Again, some of the activities that are usually taking place on land, and that cause disturbanc­e in how the city moves, can be done on a temporary basis on the water,” said Rus.

The boats could also be equipped with environmen­tal sensors to monitor a city's waters and gain insight into urban and human health.

To make the boats, the researcher­s 3- D- printed a rectangula­r hull with a commercial printer, producing 16 separate sections that were spliced together. Printing took around 60 hours. The completed hull

was the n sealed by adhering several layers of fibreglass.

Integrated onto the hull are a power supply, Wi- Fi antenna, GPS, and a minicomput­er and microcontr­oller. For precise positionin­g, the researcher­s incorporat­ed an indoor ultrasound beacon system and outdoor realtime kinematic GPS modules, which allow for centimeter­level localisati­on, as well as an inertial measuremen­t unit ( IMU) module that monitors the boat's yaw and angular velocity, among other metrics. The boat is a rectangula­r shape, instead of the traditiona­l kayak or catamaran shapes, to allow the vessel to move sideways and to attach itself to other boats when assembling other structures.

Researcher­s used an efficient predictive- control platform to run their algorithm, which can rapidly determine upcoming actions and increases the algorithm’s speed by two orders of magnitude over

similar systems.

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