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Khaled Chahine, Mark Ballico
Assessment of Reproducibility and Linearity of the NMIA Bell Prover Using a High Flowrate Sonic Nozzle Array

Critical flow Venturi, or sonic, nozzles are widely used in gas flow metrology as stable and convenient transfer standards. Once the nozzle coefficient has been determined by calibration against a primary standard, the mass flowrate can be determined by knowledge of the upstream gas composition and its pressure and temperature. As these can be determined with great precision, the mass flow achieved can be more reproducible than the nozzle calibration. At NMIA, sonic nozzles used to cover the range 1 to 25 m³/h are calibrated against a bell prover, with an uncertainty of 0.13 % (k = 2). Calibration of the nozzles in additive combination, using a sonic-nozzle array developed at NMIA, allows estimation of the non-linearity of the bell prover primary standard at its maximum flow. In this paper, extensive measurements of the reproducibility of the bell prover calibration of sonic-nozzles are used to identify correlated uncertainty terms in the nozzle calibration, which in turn used to assess the non-linearity as 0.07 % for the highest flows, with a reduced standard uncertainty of 0.015 %.

Chunhui Li
Bilateral Comparison Confirms NIM’s and NIST’s Gas Flow Capabilities

A bilateral comparison of the gas flow standards of the National Institute of Metrology (NIM) in China and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in the USA was conducted from June 2008 to October 2009. Two critical flow venturis (CFVs) with nominal throat diameters of 10 mm and 20 mm, respectively, were selected as transfer standards. The CFVs were calibrated on NIM’s 20 m³ PVTt system and then on NIST’s 26 m³ PVTt system. The results demonstrate the equivalence between NIM’s and NIST’s gas flow measurement capabilities for flows ranging from 1000 liters per minute to 4000 liters per minute at reference conditions of 101.325 kPa and 293.15 K. The experimental data agreed with existing theoretical models within 0.07 %. All the data agree with the ISO 9300 empirical equation within its 0.3 % expanded uncertainty limit.

Michael Reader-Harris
Flow Measurement and Energy


Matti Saarikko, Jani Koskimaa, Pasi Penttinen, Jussi Ali-kovero, Jürgen Köberle, Stefan Bullmer, Jens Henzler, Björn Steurer, Dr. Alexander Wolf, Steffen Ruedel, Fabian Meilinger, Christian Seidl, Matthias Hentschel
ELROB 2018 - Team Patria participating in Convoy Scenario

The team Patria consists of three project partners with different focus in research and development. The Patria AMV vehicles used in the scenario are both R&D platforms, which have been developed in a cooperation of Patria and Diehl Defence. The platforms are used by the team in the convoy competition at the ELROB 2018. While one of the vehicles (called AMV 2) is equipped with a Drive-by-Wire system developed by Patria and with a sensor package to track a leading vehicle the other AMV (AMV 1) is a vehicle with standard configuration. Only a LTB (Leader Tracking Box) developed by Diehl Defence is installed on this vehicle. The LTB consists of a GPS/IMU system and radio. Therefore, the LTB is able to determine its position and to send it to the following AMV 2 vehicle. The AMV 2 additionally has a Continental automotive RADAR which is used for tracking. Both, sensor data from the RADAR, and the LTB position estimation, are fused to achieve a robust and accurate tracking of the leading vehicle.

Jürgen Köberle, Stefan Bullmer, Jens Henzler, Björn Steurer, Dr. Alexander Wolf, Steffen, Ruedel, Fabian Meilinger, Christian Seidl, David Skuddis, Matthias Hentschel
ELROB 2018 - Team Diehl THeMIS participating in Mule Scenario

The team Diehl THeMIS Vehicle is the tracked THeMIS platform developed and produced by Milrem Robotics (EST). Milrem has participated with the THeMIS in several competitions in the last couples of years like SMET (US) and Last Mile (UK).
For the mule scenario the THeMIS will use a local terrain based grid map generated based on two LiDAR systems in combination with a waypoint navigation algorithm that has been developed and optimized continuously in the last five years. Both, map and navigation algorithm has been developed by Diehl Defence and Hentschel System.

V. Gradetsky, M. Knyazkov
Unmanned vehicle systems in unstructured environments: challenge and current status

The scientific and applied interest to Unmanned vehicle systems (UVS) or Unmanned guided vehicles (UGV) is growing every year and a lot of world-known universities and companies are working very hard in R&D of UVS. The fully autonomous vehicles or ones with different degrees of autonomy vehicles are used on the land, in the air, and in the sea for broad range of technologies including hazardous waste cleanup, agriculture crops processing, transportation, underwater monitoring, nuclear power station repair, as well as security, inspection, demining, military operations.The new uses for these systems may be found every day.
Real UVS has to understand control commands fast and without mistakes. They have to possess logically thinking, have possibilities of learning and training, produce decision making by themselves, to move in unknown environment without operator. However, today in practice the situation may arise when operator forced to intervene in teleoperated control because of unsufficient reliability of robot behaviour. High level of artificial intelligence and mind as well as data base and special software are required for real UVS.

Y. Baudoin
RPAS -UGV: a growing market for military and civilian applications

The Royal Military Academy was coordinating two European Projects , one focusing on Humanitarian Demining, the other one on Search and Rescue Operations, both projects intending to exploit the improved performances of Robotics Systems, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV) or, better said, Remotely Piloted Aircraft Systems (RPAS) in particular and Unmanned Land-vehicles or UGV.
The RPAS are characterized by an increasing development and use in the military sector for combat, combat support and logistic missions, as well as in the civilian sphere, essentially focusing on Environmental Surveillance and Security missions: The well-known acronym RSTA summarizes those missions: RECONNAISSANCE, SURVEILLANCE, TARGET ACQUISITION The UGV are still prototypes and regularly tested through competitions like ELROB (www.elrob.org).

F. Ebert, P. Berthold, P. Burger, T. Engler, A. Frericks, B. C. Heinrich, J. Kallwies, M. Kusenbach, T. Luettel, K. Metzger, M. Michaelis, B. Naujoks, A. Sticht, H.-J. Wuensche
ELROB 2018 – Convoy and Mule of Team MuCAR

We present the hard- and software components of team MuCAR’s fully autonomous vehicles to participate at the ELROB 2018 in the convoy and mule scenarios. For the convoy scenario, different tracking approaches are applied to track the leading vehicle. Data association of the tracking results is done in a PHD filter framework. Given the resulting estimate, an optimization-based planning module computes kinematically feasible trajectories to follow the leading vehicle’s path as close as possible with a velocity-dependent lateral distance.
In the mule scenario, the leading guide is tracked either with a LiDAR-based Greedy Dirichlet Process Filter (GDPF) approach or in a vision-only approach by segmenting the disparity image and reprojection into 3D space to match the existing track. During the shuttling phase, two environment modeling algorithms were implemented. Again, one mapping approach is based on LiDAR and the second is based on vision only. The LiDAR mapping approach includes besides occupancy, color information, heights and terrain slopes. In the vision-only mapping approach a dense disparity image with a tri-focal camera is generated and back-projected to create a virtual 3D scene.
Finally, a high-level mission planning module and a local trajectory planner are used for GPS-based autonomous shuttling. The local trajectory planner based on a hybrid A* approach incorporates data from the environment mapping modules for goal-oriented navigation and local obstacle avoidance.

Daniela Doroftei, Geert De Cubber
Qualitative and quantitative validation of drone detection systems

As drones are more and more entering our world, so comes the need to regulate the access to airspace for these systems. A necessary tool in order to do this is a means of detecting these drones. Numerous commercial and non-commercial parties have started the development of such drone detection systems. A big problem with these systems is that the evaluation of the performance of drone detection systems is a difficult operation, which requires the careful consideration of all technical and non-technical aspects of the system under test. Indeed, weather conditions and small variations in the appearance of the targets can have a huge difference on the performance of the systems. In order to provide a fair evaluation and an honest comparison between systems, it is therefore paramount that a stringent validation procedure is followed. Moreover, the validation methodology needs to find a compromise between the often contrasting requirements of end users (who want tests to be performed in operational conditions) and platform developers (who want tests to be performed that are statistically relevant). Therefore, we propose in this paper a qualitative and quantitative validation methodology for drone detection systems. The proposed validation methodology seeks to find this compromise between operationally relevant benchmarking (by providing qualitative benchmarking under varying environmental conditions) and statistically relevant evaluation (by providing quantitative score sheets under strictly described conditions).

Niels Nauwynck, Haris Balta, Geert De Cubber, Hichem Sahli
In-flight launch of unmanned aerial vehicles

This paper considers the development of a system to enable the in-flight-launch of one aerial system by another. The paper will discuss how an optimal release mechanism was developed, taking into account the aerodynamics of one specific mother and child UAV. Furthermore, it will discuss the PID-based control concept that was introduced in order to autonomously stabilize the child UAV after being released from the mothership UAV. Finally, the paper will show how the concept of a mothership UAV + child UAV combination could be usefully taken into advantage in the context of a search and rescue operation.

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