Power gridSolar-powered robot crawls on aging power lines to inspect the grid
The U.S. grid infrastructure has two characteristics: it is vast and it is aging; now there is a cost-effective way to examine thousands of miles of power lines: a new, solar-powered, 140-pound, six-foot-long robot; the robot uses rollers to clamp onto and move along a line; it can maneuver past towers, known as pylons, using cables built into newer towers or retrofitted onto old ones
LineScout, a Canadian entry in the powerline inspection field // Source: ieee.org
A robot designed to crawl along tens of thousands of miles of transmission lines could help inspect North America’s vast and aging grid infrastructure without the need for manned helicopters inspections.
Researchers at the Electric Power Research Institute, an independent nonprofit research organization for the utility sector, , have designed a 140-pound, six-foot-long prototype of a robot that they plan to test for the first time at an outdoor lab later this month. The device uses rollers to clamp onto and move along a line. It can maneuver past towers, known as pylons, using cables built into newer towers or retrofitted onto old ones. “There is nothing that does what it does; nothing that even tries,” said Andrew Phillips, director of power transmission research at the institute.
Tyler Hamilton writes that the rectangular robot — looking a bit like a scaled down version of a solar car — is equipped with a high-definition camera and sensors that can detect overgrown trees. “It will do image analysis to see if there is something different with the structure compared to an earlier picture taken from the exact same spot,” says Phillips. Being able to remotely spot high-risk trees, which are the top cause of electrical outages, is important to utilities. The big August 2003 blackout was triggered by a poorly trimmed tree. “The images will be very high-definition, and we’ll be able to zoom in,” Phillips adds.
The prototype robot will also make sure there are no faulty connections that can cause overheating, and listen for electromagnetic “noise” that might indicate other problems with equipment. It could also retrieve data from sensors that are already connected to equipment in the field but which normally rely on helicopter or ground visits to get the information.
Having the ability to look at the condition of equipment without physically being there will bring tremendous value to utilities, said Phillips. It is too early to say how much the robot will cost, but Phillips figures it will be less than $500,000 each. “The expectation is that it’s going to be at least less than 70 percent of the cost (of using helicopters),” he says.
The device rolls at about three miles an hour along a high-lying “shield wire,” a wire that protects the main transmission lines below from lightning strikes. Initially, the plan to power the robot involved covering its surface with solar cells that would charge a lithium polymer battery inside. “We decided instead to harvest power flowing through the shield wire itself,” says Phillips, who explains that the shield wire picks up some power flow from the nearby transmission lines through electromagnetic induction. Solar cells will still be used for backup power, however.
Hamilton writes that in the most remote areas, raw data that has been collected will be sent back to the utility through a satellite link. Higher bandwidth information, such as digital images, will be transmitted through cell-phone signals when the robot gets closer to population centers. Phillips figures that each robot will be capable of covering eighty miles of line twice a year.
George Juhn, director of investment planning and asset management at Ontario transmission giant Hydro One, notes that aerial drones are also being tested by the industry as a way to collect data about remote power lines. “A device such as [the new robot] does need to go through extensive testing to ensure it provides reliable information,” he says, adding “It would definitely be of interest to us.”
Phillips says the problem with aerial drones is that the U.S. Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) has strict rules on how and when they can be used because of the potential impact if they malfunctioned. A line-crawling robot poses less of a threat and can travel the lines all year and, if necessary, even at night.
Phillips agrees, though, that much more testing is needed. He says the first commercial test is expected to take place as early as 2014 along the Potomac-Appalachian Transmission Highline, a new 275-mile transmission corridor being built by Allegheny Energy and American Electric Power in Columbus, Ohio.