view counter

First responseRoom-scouting robot to help first responders, soldiers

Published 24 April 2014

Firefighters, police officers, and military personnel are often required to enter rooms with little information about what dangers might lie behind the door. A group of engineering students at Arizona State University is working on a project which would help alleviate that uncertainty. The product they are building consists of a laser sensor attached to a motor that sweeps all the way around a room, taking 700-800 individual scans, each one with about 680 unique data points. This information is transmitted to a computer program that creates a picture of the room and all its contents. Whoever is controlling the sensor remotely can see and analyze the data in real-time, as it is being collected.

Travis Marshall working with his laser room-mapping device // Source: asu.edu

Firefighters, police officers, and military personnel are often required to enter rooms with little information about what dangers might lie behind the door. A group of engineering students at Arizona State University is working on a project that would help alleviate that uncertainty.

“We’re creating a room-mapping system that can be used to map rooms in three-dimensional space,” says Travis Marshall, a student in the College of Technology and Innovation. With guidance from two faculty mentors, Marshall and four other ASU students are working with Sandia National Laboratories to come up with a way to scan a room and produce a 3-D rendering of what’s inside.

An ASU release reports that the product they are building consists of a laser sensor attached to a motor that sweeps all the way around a room, taking 700-800 individual scans, each one with about 680 unique data points. This information is transmitted to a computer program that creates a picture of the room and all its contents. Whoever is controlling the sensor remotely can see and analyze the data in real-time, as it is being collected.

“The ultimate goal is for this to be very much separated from the user,” Marshall says. “It could be useful for surveillance, or pretty much anywhere a person couldn’t go, or wouldn’t want to go.”

The technology offers incredible potential. A firefighter might be able to avoid entering a room engulfed in flames by mapping it beforehand to determine if there is a need to go inside. A soldier could scan a building and identify potential threats so that he or she is not blindsided.

“Also, if there has been some sort of emergency in a building where rescue workers can’t go inside for fear of it collapsing, this would be a system that could go in and survey damage, possibly survey invisible physical damage to the building’s infrastructure, without people having to go in and risk their lives to do it,” Marshall says.

The release notes that the students are building the system for Sandia National Laboratories, a U.S. Department of Energy research facility that focuses on security issues. While Sandia has challenged the team to create the most accurate sensor possible, they are also interested in learning about its limitations. For example, the current prototype can’t scan reflective surfaces or see around objects in the room. These challenges, however, provide helpful insight and are part of the learning process for both parties.

“After we get a blank room mapped, they want us to progressively be able to map more and more complex rooms,” Marshall says. He and his teammates — Matt Bodington, Preston Yeschick, Jeffrey Rojo, and Steven Sanchez — are all engineering students who began working together through ASU’s iProjects program. The program matches student groups with industry partners that need help solving real-world challenges.

Each team also benefits from the help of faculty mentors. Angela Sodemann and Tom Sugar are both engineering professors at CTI with experience working on technology similar to what Marshall’s team is developing. They volunteered to be mentors, and have worked closely with the team since the project began.

Sodemann says the students were faced with a unique challenge in that no one was quite sure what the final product would look like.

“This project is pretty open-ended. They don’t have a definite task that they’re trying to accomplish in the end. They kind of have a series of increasingly difficult challenges that they’re trying to meet,” Sodemann says. But that’s what makes the process so valuable. The experience of tackling a problem that’s not clearly defined will prepare the team for their future careers.

“Having to decide for themselves what steps they need to take along the way is good practice for the way that problems really are out there in the real world,” Sodemann says.

For Marshall, who is also using the project to fulfill his senior capstone requirement, the opportunity to work closely, one-on-one with Sugar and Sodemann has been a highlight of the project. He also appreciates the exercise in problem-solving with students from different engineering backgrounds to accomplish a common goal.

“This team has been awesome for getting that experience of working with people that are like-minded, that are interested in the project, that want to do well on it,” Marshall says.

The project will wrap up at the end of the semester, when Marshall and his teammates will present Sandia with the culmination of their work, as well as participate in the Innovation Showcase on the Polytechnic Campus.

view counter
view counter