October: Hot Robotics | News and features – University of Bristol

Posted: October 24, 2021 at 11:11 am

The University of Bristol is leading an initiative to make cutting-edge robotics, drones and testing spaces available for nuclear research with the launch of four Hot Robotics facilities in the UK.

The aim of the game-changing National Nuclear User Facility for Hot Robotics (NNUF-HR) is to make robotics and facilities readily available to researchers from both academia and industry, to facilitate ground-breaking, impactful nuclear research.

Funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), the four NNUF-HR sites are managed by the individual partners and are strategically dispersed across the UK. These include the University of Bristols Fenswood Facility in Somerset; the RACE (Remote Applications in Challenging Environments) at UKAEA (UK Atomic Energy Authority) Facility at Culham in Oxfordshire, The University of Manchesters RAICo One in Whitehaven and the National Nuclear Laboratorys (NNL) Workington Facility in Cumbria.

Each facility provides technology and test spaces, as well as technical support, that would otherwise be very difficult - or very expensive - to access. At the different sites, users can hire cutting-edge equipment, including quadruped robots and unmanned aerial vehicles (drones), to use on-site or at their own locations. They can also bring their own technology to test in different simulated environments and mock-up rigs.

The University of Bristol's Fenswood facility provides substantial space fordeveloping mobile robotic applications as enhanced tools for environmental field surveying. Its main capabilities focus on UAVs and mobile ground vehicles and it offers 245 acres ofspace for testing the deployment of drone and ground robots.

Professor Tom Scott, NNUF-HR Academic lead from the University of Bristol said: The aim of this initiative is to provide the UK nuclear research and development community with better equipment and facilities. As someone who has worked in the field for many years, the fact we now have these four fantastic facilities and a website where users can actually select from a wide range of cutting-edge equipment to hire, I would say this is truly a game-changer for the industry.

Im delighted the Fenswood Facility here at Bristol is now available to Hot Robotics users. The amount of ground and air space we have available for test deployments is a fantastic resource to complement the wide range of robotic equipment and sensor systems on offer.

The Hot Robotics website (https://hotrobotics.co.uk/) represents another first-of-its-kind for the industry, giving users the ability to view, book and learn more about the technology and facilities available at the four sites.

While the facilities are available for use by the whole UK nuclear energy R&D community, UK academic researchers can access equipment from the NNUF facilities for free through the Access Scheme Fund which runs quarterly application rounds. However, researchers can apply for grants of up to 5,000 at any time.

The NNUF Management Group, comprising of Professor Chris Grovenor of the University of Oxford, Professor Malcolm Joyce of Lancaster University, and Professor Francis Livens of the University of Manchester, commented:

Were pleased to see the NNUF-funded Hot Robotics facilities come online, offering a wide range of innovative robotics equipment to serve key nuclear industry clusters around the country. We urge both academia and industry to make use of these facilities and look forward to seeing researchers advance the technologies to solve challenges in the nuclear sector.

Professor Barry Lennox, who leads the NNUF-HR facility at The University of Manchester, said: The RAICo One facilities provide a unique environment where researchers from academia can work directly with engineers and operations staff from across the NDA estate and the nuclear supply chain, to ensure that the robotic systems they are developing address real industrial challenges and can exploit the direct route to industry deployment that is being established.

Dr Darren Potter, Capability Leader (Plant Intervention) at the National Nuclear Laboratory (NNL), said: We are delighted to unveilNNLsNational Nuclear User Facility for Hot Robotics (NNUF-HR), using our world-leading facilities for large-scale scientific testing and deployments. The partnership will enable us to expand NNLs centre for robotics at the Workington facility in Cumbria, which plays an active role in the UKs cutting-edge nuclear research across this exciting field of study.

Professor Rob Buckingham, Director of UKAEAs RACE facility, said: The purpose of NNUF is to accelerate the development of capability and capacity in the supply chain, from invention to scaled-up operations, in robotics and smart machines. The NNUF-HR facility at RACE will bring together end users and businesses to help create a viable innovation pipeline.

The National Nuclear User Facility for Hot Robotics is a partnership between the University of Bristol,RACE (Remote Applications in Challenging Environments) at UKAEA (UK Atomic Energy Authority), The University of Manchester, and the National Nuclear Laboratory (NNL). NNUF-HR has four partners with facilities strategically dispersed across the UK:

University of Bristol - Fenswood Facility, Somerset The University of Bristol's Fenswood facility provides substantial space fordeveloping mobile robotic applications as enhanced tools for environmental field surveying. Its main capabilities focus on UAVs and mobile ground vehicles and it offers 245 acres ofspace for testing the deployment of drone and ground robots. The equipment and facility is split between the new mezzanine kitchen/meeting area and the robot barn. This areaincludes a hot-desking and group meeting space.

UK Atomic Energy Authority - RACE Facility, CulhamRACE (Remote Applications in Challenging Environments) forms the primary NNUF-HR hub at the UK Atomic Energy Authority site in Oxfordshire. A large array of static and mobile robots, mock-ups and sensors are housed here, with additional functionality provided through 'hot' test capabilities and portable solutions that allow the transport of equipmentto user locations.

National Nuclear Laboratory - Workington Facility, CumbriaThe Workington Facility in Cumbria, offers plant representative mock-ups of decommissioning cells, store environments, and replica setups of Sellafield site active demonstrators for laser cutting & size reduction and sort & segregation, NNL provides 900m2 of flexible floorspace for users to develop, test, and demonstrate their robotic solutions on an industrial scale. Users will benefit from NNLs management of the Sellafield-led Central Robotics and AI Programme (C-RAI), as well as NNLs experience in testing and deployment of robotics and remote engineering solutions for characterisation and plant intervention within Sellafield plants.

The University of Manchester RAICo, WhitehavenThe University of Manchester is moving their NNUF-HR equipment to RAICo One in Whitehaven, Cumbria. RAICo One is a collaborative facility that has been set up as a partnership between the University of Manchester, UKAEA, NNL and Sellafield Ltd that will allow researchers from academia to work directly with robotics experts from industry. The facility offers access to mock-ups and robotic equipment to enable researchers to address nuclear decommissioning challenges. Equipment available includes an array of submersible vehicles and underwater manipulators, together with a pond equipped with an underwater and above water Vicon positioning system, where aquatic based systems can be tested. In addition, there is a wide range of sensors available including thermal cameras, radiation detectors and simulated radiation sources and detectors that are ideal for testing robot autonomy in radiation environments.

Funding for UK Academic ResearchersNNUF have a fund, available to UK Academic researchers to access equipment from the NNUF facilities for free. Calls for access to the Hot Robotics facilities, otherwise known as "application rounds", will run quarterly on a rolling basis. Applications for under 5k can be submitted at any time: Calls for access | National Nuclear User Facility (ox.ac.uk)

The National Nuclear User Facility (NNUF) was launched when HM Governments announced its Nuclear Industrial Strategy in 2013. The aim of the NNUF is to provide the UK nuclear research and development community with better equipment and facilities. These NNUF facilities are available for use by the whole UK nuclear energy R&D community.Find out more: nnuf.ac.uk

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October: Hot Robotics | News and features - University of Bristol

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