I-AUV Docking and Panel Intervention at Sea

Sensors

Category: Journals Publication Date: October, 2016 Published In/By: MDPI Volume: 16 Number/Issue: 1673 Location: Basel (Switzerland)

The use of commercially available autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs) has increased during the last years. While they are mainly used for routinely survey missions, there is a set of applications that nowadays can be only addressed by manned submersibles or work-class remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) equipped with teleoperated arms: the intervention applications. To allow these heavy vehicles controlled by human operators to perform intervention tasks, underwater structures like observatory facilities, subsea panels or oil-wells Christmas trees have been adapted making them more robust and easier to operate. The TRITON Spanish founded project proposes the use of a light-weight intervention AUV (I-AUV) to carry out intervention applications simplifying the adaptation of these underwater structures and drastically reducing  the operational cost. To prove this concept, the Girona 500 I-AUV is used to autonomously dock  into an adapted subsea panel and once docked perform an intervention composed of turning a  valve and plugging/unplugging a connector. The techniques used for the autonomous docking and  manipulation as well as the design of an adapted subsea panel with a funnel-based docking system  are presented in this article together with the results achieved in a water tank and at sea.

 

doi:10.3390/s16101673

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