Home /Research /Application of telerobotic control to remote processing of nuclear material
MANIPULATION

Application of telerobotic control to remote processing of nuclear material

R.D. Merrill, E.L. Grasz, Charles J. Herget, Donald T. Gavel, Robert B. Addis, G.A. DeMinico

Year
1991
Citations
2
Access
Open access

Abstract

In processing radioactive material there are certain steps which have customarily required operators working at glove box enclosures. This can subject the operators to low level radiation dosages and the risk of accidental contamination, as well as generate significant radioactive waste to accommodate the human interaction. An automated system is being developed to replace the operator at the glove box and thus remove the human from these risks, and minimize waste. Although most of the processing can be automated with very little human operator interaction, there are some tasks where intelligent intervention is necessary to adapt to unexpected circumstances and events. These activities will require that the operator be able to interact with the process using a remote manipulator in a manner as natural as if the operator were actually in the work cell. This robot-based remote manipulation system, or telerobot, must provide the operator with an effective means of controlling the robot arm, gripper and tools. This paper describes the effort in progress in Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to achieve this capability. 8 refs.

Keywords

TeleroboticsRobotProcess (computing)Operator (biology)Remote controlRadioactive wasteRemote operationEngineeringComputer scienceRobotic arm

Related papers

Browse all MANIPULATION papers