The End is Near: Fuel Foraging Robot developed by DARPA

ForumMaster

Diamond Member
Feb 24, 2005
7,792
1
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Energetically Autonomous Tactical Robot finds its own fuel

A robot that forages its own fuel might sound like a work of science fiction.
However, that is exactly what is coming out of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency or DARPA.

In addition to vegetation, EATR can also use conventional or unconventional fuels (e.g., heavy fuel, gasoline, natural gas, diesel, kerosene, propane, coal, solar, algae, cooking oil).

Unlike internal combustion engines, the Cyclone engine which powers EATR uses an external combustion chamber to heat a separate working fluid (de-ionized water) which expands to create mechanical energy by moving pistons or a turbine (i.e., Rankine cycle steam engine). Combustion is external so engine can run on any fuel (solid, liquid, or gaseous). So far, a 100HP engine prototype has been developed.

The Cyclone engine offers several other important benefits, including lower combustion temperatures and pressures create less toxic and exotic exhaust gases as the uniquely configured combustion chamber creates a rotating flow that facilitates complete air and fuel mixing, and complete combustion, so there are virtually no emissions and less heat released (hundreds of degrees lower than internal combustion exhaust). It also does not need a catalytic converter, radiator, transmission, oil pump or lubricating oil (water-lubricated).

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The EATR uses a robotic arm to gather and prepare vegetation, which it feeds through a shredder into a centrifugal combustion chamber, where it is ignited and then heats a series of coils. The coils contain deionized water (to stop them from furring up like a kettle). As the water inside the coils is superheated, the steam is piped to a radial steam engine, which consists of six pistons. The steam rotates the pistons, driving a generator which produces electricity. This is stored in batteries that power the electric motors which drive the EATR along.

The steam engine is designed to be a “closed-loop” system, in which water escaping from the cylinders through the exhaust ports is captured and cooled in a condensing unit. This turns the steam back into water, which is then returned to the combustion chamber.

Image-recognition software linked to a laser and camera would allow EATR to recognize plants, leaves and wood. Robert Finkelstein, Robotic Technology’s president, estimates that about 68 kilograms (150 pounds) of vegetation would provide enough electricity for the machine to travel around 160km (100 miles). The company recently received EATR’s engine, which has been developed by Cyclone Power Technology of Florida. The next stage is to integrate the EATR technology into a military vehicle to prove that the idea works. The type of vehicle that will be used has not yet been decided, although it could be a HMMWV modified to drive itself under robotic control. After a period of testing, Dr Finkelstein is confident that a fully working EATR prototype vehicle that acts autonomously could be fielded by around 2013.

A detailed PDF outlining the program can be found here.

Link



So...this thing sounds like an elephant. has to "eat" a lot and can't survive out of the jungle...still cool. Still think a nuclear battery would last longer...
 

SlitheryDee

Lifer
Feb 2, 2005
17,252
19
81
That's damn cool. What's something like that good for though? Perhaps it could carry supplies or evacuate troops off of a battle field. Seems kinda clunky and not-stealthy for recon.
 

Ruptga

Lifer
Aug 3, 2006
10,246
207
106
I don't think this was ever intended to be a practical project. But, once they get this thing working they can integrate its technology into more practical things. For example, this could result in our Terminator overlords being able to operate in the field indefinitely without having to find electricity or run on dangerous fuel cells.
 

PottedMeat

Lifer
Apr 17, 2002
12,363
475
126
The EATR uses a robotic arm to gather and prepare vegetation, which it feeds through a shredder into a centrifugal combustion chamber, where it is ignited and then heats a series of coils.

Haha this would be sweet for crowd control.

<Dirty hippie holding up sign promoting peace & love>
[TARGET ACQUIRED]
<Arm picks up hippie by head and drops into shredder>
[POWER RESERVES +10&#37;]

all it needs is a 'kill all humans' directive.
 

xanis

Lifer
Sep 11, 2005
17,571
8
0
I've heard about this somewhere before. I can't find another thread on it though, so I won't call Repost. :p

Pretty awesome though. I wonder if there's a limit on the kind of stuff it can consume for power?
 

Fenixgoon

Lifer
Jun 30, 2003
33,055
12,448
136
Haha this would be sweet for crowd control.

<Dirty hippie holding up sign promoting peace & love>
[TARGET ACQUIRED]
<Arm picks up hippie by head and drops into shredder>
[POWER RESERVES +10%]

all it needs is a 'kill all humans' directive.

hey there baby... wanna kill all humans?
 

Hacp

Lifer
Jun 8, 2005
13,923
2
81
Ok with self repairing robots and now self fueling robots, it's pretty clear that the end is near.
 

AndroidVageta

Banned
Mar 22, 2008
2,421
0
0
Well...this is awesome...just one more thing added to the list that can potentially destroy our planet...GOOD WORK DARPA!!!
 

Newbian

Lifer
Aug 24, 2008
24,779
882
126
As long as they don't use us for power I am happy...that is until they start the probing. :eek:
 

Fritzo

Lifer
Jan 3, 2001
41,920
2,161
126
Oh crap! Some moved the switch from vegetation to flesh!!!! Why did we install that switch anyway?????