This audio is automatically generated. Do us know if you have comments.
Brief of diving:
- A robotic system that improves the Ponts Inspection won the American Society of Civil Engineers 2025 Charles Pankow for innovation, according to a February 28th News of the University of Missouri Science and Technology.
- The bridge inspection robot deployment system, or birds, was developed by a team led by Missouri professor S&T Genda Chen. Includes three drones that capture the bridge data using infrared cameras, lidar and a crack probe.
- The prize It presents itself annually and recognizes the contributions of organizations that advance the design and construction industry through the introduction of innovation into practice, according to the ASC.
Divide vision:
The three drones of the system work in concert to collect and analyze the data of the scope.
The first drone flies and can drag in the bridge beams to make inspections with infrared cameras and lidar. A second UAV brings and unfolds a small tracker similar to the bicycle to examine steel components with a microscope or fissure probe, and a third one uses a manipulator to perform maintenance tasks and tests of defects on concrete.
Chen, who runs the Rolla -based smart infrastructure center, says that the next steps will be to continue testing potential areas to improve with technology and work with agencies and companies to pursue its adoption on a wider scale, according to the statement.
The Birds project began in 2019 and has received more than $ 1 million in funding from the United States Dot University Transportation Program and sources of agreement, according to the school.
“Federal standards require regular bridge inspections, which can be a challenge due to the large number of bridges and their difficulty in accessing,” Chen said to the statement. “The inspection data that we can recover from birds will greatly help these problems, ensuring that the structures are safe and well careful and finally reduce the costs of the life cycle.”
Chen patented technology in a similar thematic area last September. Chen Pot invention detect tiny movements in compound materials and prevent the structural problems that result.
Chen’s collaborators include:
- Donn Digamon, State Bridge Engineer for Georgia Dot.
- Bryan Hartnagel, a state -of -the -art engineer for Missouri Dot.
- Hung La, assistant professor of computer science and engineering at the University of Nevada, Reno.
- Michael Premo, engineer of the attached structures of the Nevada dowry.
- Yang Wang, Professor of Civil Engineering at the Technology Institute of Georgia.