
Hydrason Solutions Ltd
Hydrason Solutions Ltd
2 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2017 - 2020Partners:Hi Speed Sustainable Manufacturing Inst, BPP-Tech, The University of Manchester, Fugro (United Kingdom), University of Salford +27 partnersHi Speed Sustainable Manufacturing Inst,BPP-Tech,The University of Manchester,Fugro (United Kingdom),University of Salford,OFFSHORE RENEWABLE ENERGY CATAPULT,Hydrason Solutions Ltd,SIEMENS PLC,BASEC (British Approvals Serv for Cables,CENSIS,Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult,BASEC (British Approvals Serv for Cables,SIEMENS PLC,DNV GL (UK),University of Edinburgh,Nova Innovation,BPP-TECH,Fugro GEOS Ltd,European Marine Energy Centre,Scottish Power (United Kingdom),Siemens plc (UK),Offshore Renewable Energy Catapult,European Marine Energy Centre,Nova Innovation Ltd,HSSMI (High Speed Sust Manufact Inst),Scottish Power Energy Networks Holdings Limited,University of Manchester,Scottish Power Energy Networks Holdings Limited,Innovation Centre for Sensor and Imaging Systems,DNV GL (UK),Scottish Power Energy Networks,Hydrason Solutions LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/P009743/1Funder Contribution: 3,048,220 GBPThis project will undertake the research necessary for the remote inspection and asset management of offshore wind farms and their connection to shore. This industry has the potential to be worth £2billion annually by 2025 in the UK alone according to studies for the Crown Estate. At present most Operation and Maintenance (O&M) is still undertaken manually onsite. Remote monitoring through advanced sensing, robotics, data-mining and physics-of-failure models therefore has significant potential to improve safety and reduce costs. Typically 80-90% of the cost of offshore O&M according to the Crown Estate is a function of accessibility during inspection - the need to get engineers and technicians to remote sites to evaluate a problem and decide what remedial action to undertake. Minimising the need for human intervention offshore is a key route to maximising the potential, and minimising the cost, for offshore low-carbon generation. This will also ensure potential problems are picked up early, when the intervention required is minimal, before major damage has occurred and when maintenance can be scheduled during a good weather window. As the Crown Estate has identified: "There is an increased focus on design for reliability and maintenance in the industry in general, but the reality is that there is a still a long way to go. Wind turbine, foundation and electrical elements of the project infrastructure would all benefit from innovative solutions which can demonstrably reduce O&M spending and downtime". Recent, more detailed, academic studies support this position. The wind farm is however an extremely complicated system-of-systems consisting of the wind turbines, the collection array and the connection to shore. This consists of electrical, mechanical, thermal and materials engineering systems and their complex interactions. Data needs to be extracted from each of these, assessed as to its significance and combined in models that give meaningful diagnostic and prognostic information. This needs to be achieved without overwhelming the user. Unfortunately, appropriate multi-physics sensing schemes and reliability models are a complex and developing field, and the required knowledge base is presently scattered across a variety of different UK universities and subject specialisms. This project will bring together and consolidate theoretical underpinning research from a variety of disparate prior research work, in different subject areas and at different universities. Advanced robotic monitoring and advanced sensing techniques will be integrated into diagnostic and prognostic schemes which will allow improved information to be streamed into multi-physics operational models for offshore windfarms. Life-time, reliability and physics of failure models will be adapted to provide a holistic view of wind-farms system health and include these new automated information flows. While aspects of the techniques required in this offshore application have been previously used in other fields, they are innovative for the complex problems and harsh environment in this offshore system-of-systems. 'Marinising' these methods is a substantial challenge in itself. The investigation of an integrated monitoring platform and the reformulation of models and techniques to allow synergistic use of data flow in an effective and efficient diagnostic and prognostic model is ambitious and would allow a major step change over present practice.
All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://beta.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::bdc64a2f00f8c21ba568aae7e274898d&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eumore_vert All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://beta.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::bdc64a2f00f8c21ba568aae7e274898d&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.euassignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2022Partners:Baker Hughes (United Kingdom), SBT, Thales (United Kingdom), Thales Optronics Ltd, Balfour Beatty (United Kingdom) +85 partnersBaker Hughes (United Kingdom),SBT,Thales (United Kingdom),Thales Optronics Ltd,Balfour Beatty (United Kingdom),Subsea 7 Limited,KUKA Robotics UK Limited,BAE Systems (UK),Edinburgh International Science Festival,KUKA (United Kingdom),BAE Systems (Sweden),Selex-ES Ltd,BAE Systems (Sweden),RENISHAW,HRI-EU,Mactaggart Scott & Co Ltd,Industrial Systems and Control (United Kingdom),Heriot-Watt University,General Dynamics (United Kingdom),RENISHAW,Renishaw plc (UK),Selex ES Ltd,Baker Hughes Ltd,Touch Bionics,Pelamis Wave Power (United Kingdom),Schlumberger (United Kingdom),DI4D,CRRC (United Kingdom),BALFOUR BEATTY RAIL LIMITED,Pelamis Wave Power (United Kingdom),SICSA,Aquamarine Power Ltd,National Institute of Informatics,Industrial Systems and Control (United Kingdom),Pelamis Wave Power (United Kingdom),Kinova (Canada),BALFOUR BEATTY RAIL,Industrial Systems and Control (United Kingdom),AMP,Edinburgh Science Foundation Limited,SBT,Rail Safety and Standards Board (United Kingdom),TRL,SciSys,Mactaggart Scott & Co Ltd,Hydrason Solutions Ltd,Scisys (United Kingdom),KUKA Robotics UK Limited,Leonardo (United Kingdom),YDreams (Portugal),MARZA Animation Planet USA,TRL,Transport Research Laboratory (United Kingdom),Thales Optronics Ltd,YDreams,Soil Machine Dynamics UK,Shadow Robot (United Kingdom),MARZA Animation Planet USA,OC Robotics,SICSA,SCR,Dimensional Imaging (United Kingdom),BP EXPLORATION OPERATING COMPANY LTD,SeeByte Ltd,OC Robotics,SciSys,RSSB,Dyson Appliances Ltd,Renishaw (United Kingdom),BAE Systems (United Kingdom),Subsea 7 Limited,Heriot-Watt University,RSSB,NII,AMP,Shadow Robot Company Ltd,Dyson Appliances Ltd,BALFOUR BEATTY RAIL,Honda (Germany),Dyson Limited,BP (United Kingdom),Mactaggart Scott & Co Ltd,Kinova,Thales Optronics Ltd,HRI-EU,Heriot-Watt University,SCR,Touch Bionics,Hydrason Solutions Ltd,BP EXPLORATION OPERATING COMPANY LTDFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L016834/1Funder Contribution: 5,784,700 GBPRobots will revolutionise the world's economy and society over the next twenty years, working for us, beside us and interacting with us. The UK urgently needs graduates with the technical skills and industry awareness to create an innovation pipeline from academic research to global markets. Key application areas include manufacturing, assistive and medical robots, offshore energy, environmental monitoring, search and rescue, defence, and support for the aging population. The robotics and autonomous systems area has been highlighted by the UK Government in 2013 as one the 8 Great Technologies that underpin the UK's Industrial Strategy for jobs and growth. The essential challenge can be characterised as how to obtain successful INTERACTIONS. Robots must interact physically with environments, requiring compliant manipulation, active sensing, world modelling and planning. Robots must interact with each other, making collaborative decisions between multiple, decentralised, heterogeneous robotic systems to achieve complex tasks. Robots must interact with people in smart spaces, taking into account human perception mechanisms, shared control, affective computing and natural multi-modal interfaces.Robots must introspect for condition monitoring, prognostics and health management, and long term persistent autonomy including validation and verification. Finally, success in all these interactions depend on engineering enablers, including architectural system design, novel embodiment, micro and nano-sensors, and embedded multi-core computing. The Edinburgh alliance in Robotics and Autonomous Systems (EDU-RAS) provides an ideal environment for a Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) to meet these needs. Heriot Watt University and the University of Edinburgh combine internationally leading science with an outstanding track record of exploitation, and world class infrastructure enhanced by a recent £7.2M EPSRC plus industry capital equipment award (ROBOTARIUM). A critical mass of experienced supervisors cover the underpinning disciplines crucial to autonomous interaction, including robot learning, field robotics, anthropomorphic & bio-inspired designs, human robot interaction, embedded control and sensing systems, multi-agent decision making and planning, and multimodal interaction. The CDT will enable student-centred collaboration across topic boundaries, seeking new research synergies as well as developing and fielding complete robotic or autonomous systems. A CDT will create cohort of students able to support each other in making novel connections between problems and methods; with sufficient shared understanding to communicate easily, but able to draw on each other's different, developing, areas of cutting-edge expertise. The CDT will draw on a well-established program in postgraduate training to create an innovative four year PhD, with taught courses on the underpinning theory and state of the art and research training closely linked to career relevant skills in creativity, ethics and innovation. The proposed centre will have a strong participative industrial presence; thirty two user partners have committed to £9M (£2.4M direct, £6.6M in kind) support; and to involvement including Membership of External Advisory Board to direct and govern the program, scoping particular projects around specific interests, co-funding of PhD studentships, access to equipment and software, co-supervision of students, student placements, contribution to MSc taught programs, support for student robot competition entries including prize money, and industry lead training on business skills. Our vision for the Centre is as a major international force that can make a generational leap in the training of innovation-ready postgraduates who are experienced in deployment of robotic and autonomous systems in the real world.
All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://beta.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::15400541469731146f0306c151da5875&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eumore_vert All Research productsarrow_drop_down <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- document.write('<div id="oa_widget"></div>'); document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="https://beta.openaire.eu/index.php?option=com_openaire&view=widget&format=raw&projectId=ukri________::15400541469731146f0306c151da5875&type=result"></script>'); --> </script>For further information contact us at helpdesk@openaire.eu