Carlo Ratti, MIT:
Seaswarm autonomous oil-absorbing robot could absorb up to 20 times its
own weight in oil
August 30, 2010
Using a cutting edge nanotechnology,
researchers at MIT have created a robotic prototype that could
autonomously navigate the surface of the ocean to collect surface oil
and process it on site.
The first Seaswarm
prototype was tested in the Charles River in mid-August 2010. The
vehicle’s flexible conveyor belt easily adapted to surface waves and the
photovoltaic-covered ‘head’ maximized exposure to the sun. Image
courtesy of the Senseable City Lab
The system, called Seaswarm, is a fleet of vehicles that may make
cleaning up future oil spills both less expensive and more efficient
than current skimming methods. MIT’s Senseable City Lab will unveil the
first Seaswarm prototype at the Venice Biennale's Italian Pavilion on
Saturday, August 28. The Venice Biennale is an international art, music
and architecture festival whose current theme addresses how
nanotechnology will change the way we live in 2050.
The Seaswarm robot uses a conveyor belt covered with a thin nanowire
mesh to absorb oil. The fabric, developed by MIT Visiting Associate
Professor Francesco Stellacci, and previously featured in a paper
published in the journal Nature Nanotechnology, can absorb up to twenty
times its own weight in oil while repelling water. By heating up the
material, the oil can be removed and burnt locally and the nanofabric
can be reused.
“We envisioned something that would move as a 'rolling carpet' along the
water and seamlessly absorb a surface spill,” said Senseable City Lab
Associate Director Assaf Biderman. “This led to the design of a novel
marine vehicle: a simple and lightweight conveyor belt that rolls on the
surface of the ocean, adjusting to the waves.”
The Seaswarm robot, which is 16 feet long and seven feet wide, uses two
square meters of solar panels for self-propulsion. With just 100 watts,
the equivalent of one household light bulb, it could potentially clean
continuously for weeks.
By autonomously navigating the water’s surface, Seaswarm proposes a
new system for ocean-skimming and oil removal.
Traditional skimmers are attached to large vessels and need to
constantly return to the shore for maintenance. Over 800 skimmers were
deployed in the Gulf of Mexico during the summer of 2010; however, it is
estimated that these skimmers collected only three percent of the
surface oil.
“Unlike traditional skimmers, Seaswarm is based on a system of small,
autonomous units that behave like a swarm and 'digest' the oil locally
while working around the clock without human intervention,” explained
Senseable City Lab Director Carlo Ratti.
Using swarm behavior, the units will use wireless communication and GPS
and manage their coordinates and ensure an even distribution over a
spill site.. By detecting the edge of a spill and moving inward, a
single vehicle could clean an entire site autonomously or engage other
vehicles for faster cleaning.
“We hope that giant oil spills such as the Deepwater Horizon incident
will not occur in the future, however, small oil leaks happen constantly
in off shore drilling,” Ratti said. “The brief we gave ourselves was to
design a simple, inexpensive cleaning system to address this problem.”
MIT researchers estimate that a fleet of 5,000 Seaswarm robots would be
able to clean a spill the size of the gulf in one month. The team has
future plans to enter their design into the X-Prize’s $1 million
oil-cleanup competition. The award is given to the team that can most
efficiently collect surface oil with the highest recovery rate.
Senseable
City Lab’s initial Seaswarm prototype will be unveiled at the Venice
Biennale’s Italian Pavilion on Saturday, August 28. Visitors will be
able to interact with the prototype and view a video on how the vehicle
was constructed and how it operates. The Venice Biennale runs from
August 29 to November 21, 2010.
The members of Senseable’s Seaswarm team include Luigi Farrauto (Team
Leader), Adam Pruden, Carnaven Chiu, Diego Malinoff, Malima Wolf, David
Anderson, Sey Min, Rex Britter, Lindsey Hoshaw, Jennifer Dunnam, David
Lee, Dietmar Offenhuber, Jan Kokol, Phil Salesses, Matthew Kai Johnson
Roberson, Assaf Biderman and Carlo Ratti. The installation at the Venice
Biennale was developed in collaboration with Walter Nicolino, Giovanni
de Niederhausern, Samuel Colle Dominguez Maldonado, Andrea Cassi,
Alberto Bottero and Filipa Carvalho who are part of Walter Nicolino and
Carlo Ratti’s architecture office, Carlorattiassociati, in Torino,
Italy.