Abstract

The article presents a cable-driven parallel robot for the in situ construction with designed granular materials at full architectural scale. Granular materials are defined as high numbers of particles larger than a micrometer, between which only short-range repulsive forces are acting. Therefore, they can have the properties of both a solid and a liquid. These materials are, thus, highly pertinent as construction materials, since they are fully recyclable and reconfigurable. Going even beyond these basic properties, a designed granular material allows to tune its overall characteristics through the design of the individual particle. Granular materials can only be deployed in situ and at full scale. Suitable robotic construction systems need to be developed. Cable-driven parallel robots are defined as robotic systems, in which an “end effector” is operated by a set of cables, which are driven by computer numerically controlled motors. The cables are running through elevated pulleys. A cable-driven parallel robot, thus, allows for a “working space”, which covers an entire building site. It is comparatively lightweight and, thus, transportable between different construction sites, it is rapidly deployable, since the entire set-up takes one day only, and it is adaptable, since the pulleys can be installed in various geometric configurations. The results of this investigation show that cable-driven parallel robots are suitable as construction systems for the full-scale in situ construction of spatial enclosures with designed granular materials. This opens up a new field of research into the potentials of these full-scale, lightweight, rapidly deployable and adaptable robotic construction systems.

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