Anthropomorphic Walking Robots Integration in
Smart Green Systems
Marius Pandelea
a
, Luige Vladareanu
b
, Corina Frent Radu
c
and Mihaiela Iliescu
d
Romanian Academy, Institute of Solid Mechanics, Bucharest, Romania
Keywords: Anthropomorphic Walking Robots, Mobility, Modelling, Smart, Green Systems.
Abstract: The article presents aspects of integrating Anthropomorphic Walking Robots (AWRs) into Smart Green city
systems. Through the interaction of physical systems assisted by artificial intelligence, it is estimated that
environmental pollution risks are reduced by manufacturing processes; improving the pace of citizens’ lives
by efficiently managing the travel time between different regions of the city; increasing the quality of social
life, ensuring a greater degree of independence of the elderly or disabled people etc. In order to achieve the
above mentioned, the paper highlights some aspects of research on detection, monitoring, control and
navigation of AWRs, as well as elements of standardization of intelligent urban processes and actions.
1 INTRODUCTION
The smart city is not an exclusive city, it is the city
where living beings, objects and processes are in
intense transformation and continuous evolution and
where local services are provided for a long period
of time, which simultaneously satisfy a number of
fundamental conditions. Equitable access to
education and healthy, safe living in an unpolluted
environment that includes a strong infrastructure,
alternative resources and connection is provided.
Robotics and autonomous systems can help the
smart city, but only under certain conditions: the
existence of national and international strategies
with permanent connection between suburbs, cities
and countries; strong political engagement needed to
set the legislative framework of priorities; research
projects to identify causes, influences, and validate
solutions. In the smart city, all components and
intelligent physical systems interact continuously,
anticipating possible challenges and indicating
a
solutions to avoid situations that pose a danger; the
sustainability of the actions being mainly dependent
on a few key elements, such as: collection and
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4670-0956
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1745-2997
c
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2272-1901
d
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3280-5933
processing of data and information, technological
means used and education of citizens.
Urban demographic expansion in the near future
requires local authorities to take urgent measures
such as increasing the surface of the locality by
adding land in the immediate vicinity, building a
new, intelligent general infrastructure,
interconnecting of intelligent elements of strict
necessity, preventing ecosystem and environment
deterioration, ensuring well-being for its citizens, a
civilized and dignified life.
The efficiency of manufacturing systems, which
are embedded in the industry concept 4.0, is
becoming increasingly important, especially from
the point of view of protecting the environment and
reducing the devastating effects of climate change,
which are so obvious lately (Barreto et al., 2017).
The causes-effect diagram, presented in figure 1,
shows the potential areas and basic causes that
influence the appearance of the smart city under
specified conditions. All the causes shown
graphically are concurrent sources of variational
character and have been grouped by categories.
AWRs can perform permanent 24-hour missions
to measure deviations of phenomenon parameters,
detect unpredictable events that can cause injuries or
harming people, data transmission, information,
pictures and videos from the site of abnormal
occurrences, the collection and real-time
transmission of information to traffic participants on
226
Pandelea, M., Vladareanu, L., Radu, C. and Iliescu, M.
Anthropomorphic Walking Robots Integration in Smart Green Systems.
DOI: 10.5220/0007828402260233
In Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Smart Cities and Green ICT Systems (SMARTGREENS 2019), pages 226-233
ISBN: 978-989-758-373-5
Copyright
c
2019 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
Figure 1: Diagram causes-efect for smart city.
Figure 2: Macro SmartGreen Universe (MSCU).
the existence of unlicensed routes, the failure of some
intelligent systems installations, the violation pictures
and videos from the site of abnormal occurrences, the
collection and real-time transmission of information
to traffic participants on the existence of unlicensed
routes, the failure of some intelligent systems
installations, the violation of legal provisions, the
analysis of situations and their exemption from
normality, the establishment of guilty situations,
various information to pedestrians etc.
Scientists and researchers are invited to offer
solutions that include robots of all kinds to meet
macro targets, as we see in figure 2 below.
Today, there are a large number of complex
programs and projects in the world that are being
developed in order to transform many cities into smart
cities. Everything is done step by step, gradually on
several plans that correspond to the socio-economic
fields. Such a project is carried out by the University
of Agronomic Sciences and Veterinary Medicine of
Bucharest, Romania, through the Research Center for
the Study of Quality Agricultural Products -
HORTINVEST (figure 3), a modern, intelligent,
ecological building for the activities of research in the
fields of agriculture and food industry.
The HORTINVEST building is equipped with
smart installations and equipment that optimizes the
consumptions of utilities and reduces the risks of
environmental pollution.
Figure 3: Smart building HORTINVEST.
Anthropomorphic Walking Robots Integration in Smart Green Systems
227
2 INTEGRATION OF AWRs IN
THE SMART CITY
The urban framework of smart cities has several key
directions that define this concept. In order to
achieve this goal, concerted actions of all categories
of human resources (local authorities, citizens,
politicians, scientists etc.) together with technical
resources must collect data and information in order
to make medium and long-term decisions, but also to
develop viable and sustainable projects that include
proactive solutions.
Urbanization, management, infrastructure and
networks, civic education, public and private
transport, public lighting, public services and social
facilities offered to its citizens, drinking water
supply, sewerage, power supply, security, sanitation,
waste collection and recycling, the environment, the
economic environment, culture, entertainment, are
just a few of the key areas and issues of the smart
green city concept - see figure 4.
Urban management and urban services for smart
cities are areas of great importance. Monitoring the
essential qualitative parameters through the sensors
installed in the city allows the people to control the
changes quickly and efficiently. AWRs also help to
measure and monitor the size of the urban
macrosystem, performing routine, boring activities
for people. Their use streamlines services related to
the environment, social environment, street and
home security, real-time information on
infrastructure, but also unexpected events and
incidents.
The main topical issues that need to be solved in
smart green city include: increasing office and office
space, adapting existing infrastructure, satisfying
and optimizing the increasing demand for resources
(electricity, drinking water, land, food), increasing
the share of renewable energies consumer
protection, public safety and defence of the
population against natural disasters, food safety
management, waste recycling, logistics and mobility
services, increased demands for healthcare and
social care, new environmental standards,
incorporation of new digital technologies, reduction
of greenhouse effect gas emissions, climate change
mitigation, upgrading, support for actions initiated
by commercial applications.
Figure 4: Main areas and directions for the smart city.
MoMa-GreenSys 2019 - Special Session on Modelling Practical Paradigms of Green Manufacturing Systems
228
To monitor and control the unevenness or sudden
variation in resources or the quality of the
environment, for example, in the city it is suitable to
have fixedly sensors and robots, whether they are
anthropomorphic or mobile pessimists; they are
observed, monitored and connected to the IoT
network by transmitting in real time information for
possible emergency intervention or to solve a
particular problem.
Our research refers to the intelligent city and
proposes a concept with the new infrastructure,
called the Macro SmartGreen Universe (MSGU),
figure 2, for which were taken into account only
social services, social assistance, street and home
care needed for elderly people in the context of
AWRs involvement in their lives. This versatile,
scalable and flexible structure integrates into the
smart green city platform via the IoT internet
network with all the other smart systems and
platforms so that final decisions are quickly
redirected to implementation deployments.
2.1 Sustainable Development of Social
Systems and Citizen Safety Aided
by AWRs
The concept of a smart city can’t exist without the
inclusion of robots in the urban project and detailed
plans of the socio-economic domains as they are
progressing with citizens enhancing their well-being
and service efficiency.
Social assistance is targeted at people or
communities of people in distress, such as elderly
people, people with various disabilities, single-
parent families, families in disadvantaged
geographical areas who are entitled to well-being on
the part of society - see figure 5.
Smart Devices Machines (SDM - figure 2),
include AWRs in the smart world, requiring
equipment with super-developed senses. They can
be especially useful in indoor or outdoor
environments to perform missions that are
characterized by mobility, performance and
precision.
The analysis elements of the smart city concept
include problems and challenges, influence factors,
ideas and modern solutions. Such, (Silva et al.,
2018) proposes a verifiable architectural model of
the concept of smart sustainable city, while (Riffat et
al., 2016) proposes innovative models for the control
of urbanization, excessive industrialization and
cultural change through planning and flexibility,
economic and social stability, prosperity and
superior quality of the citizens life and energy
optimization, starting from the territorial
administrative division of the neighbourhood type.
(Serbanica and Constantin, 2017) studies the
importance and role of strategic actions well planned
in the legal and institutional framework, economic
and social environment, environmental and cultural
environment, and (Mora et al., 2018) formulates a
set of strategic principles needed to be pursued for
the smart development of the city on the basis of the
set of dichotomies adopted by several european
cities. (Yigitcanlar et al., 2019) analyses the
possibility for the future smart city to exist without
being sustainable, i.e. without a controlled balance
between the elements of the triad economic growth,
environmental protection and discovery of
alternative resources. The smart house is a necessity
of the smart city concept where resources are
efficiently managed, waste and pollutant emissions
are reduced in order to improve the quality of life in
the human habitat environment. Proposals for ideas,
strategies, methods and solutions by (Wilson et al.,
2018) exist in means of mobile robots with detection
functions and drawing up zoning topographical
plans in order to fulfil the daily activities.
Social and welfare area through social assistance
(Grieco et al., 2014), (Wachaja et al., 2017), (Wilson
et al., 2018), elderly care (Wachaja et al., 2017) and
health-care applications (Grieco et al., 2014)
(Wilson et al., 2018) represent an important
direction with a major impact on society. The study
conducted by (Shishehgar et al., 2018) represents a
wide scientific analysis of the necessity of
integrating artificial intelligence and robots into
elderly people life, avoiding the risk of social
exclusion and ensuring a decent and dignified living,
and (Wachaja et al., 2017) presents a practical
solution for moving people with walking and/or
vision impairments through the sensors; also for the
external environment, (Grieco et al., 2014) proposed
a customized solution for the assistance services
offered by robots in an airport. (Liu, 2018) presents
the advantages of interdependence between IoT and
ecological transport on the bike in the smart city,
contributing to the conservation and protection of
the environment, as well as to the sustainable
development of the city. Electricity field (Iliescu et
al., 2016), (Iliescu et al., 2018), (Kavitha and
Geetha, 2017), (Liu, 2018), (Riffat et al., 2016)
raises the interest of many researchers by developing
sustainable strategies and increased efficiency.
(Iliescu et al., 2016) offers a new, innovative,
complex and complete solution (design, manufacture
and validation of results in the real environment) for
the energy field, applicable to solar and photovoltaic
Anthropomorphic Walking Robots Integration in Smart Green Systems
229
cells, with precise reference to the obtaining of solar
cells of type Perovskite by modern, intelligent
advanced methods.
Article written by (Kavitha and Geetha, 2017)
presents an effective managerial solution that
optimizes the consumption of electricity at the level
of the individual dwelling located in the smart city
using the grid technology.
Waste recovery, an activity of the smart city,
stands at the base of studies conducted by
(Esmaeilian et al., 2018), which proposes a
conceptual, sustainable and centralized systemic
framework, interconnected through the IoT network,
for gathering information on the life cycle of
products and pursuing any resulting waste.
Study of technical elements, sensors (Esmaeilian
et al., 2018), (Kavitha and Geetha, 2017), (Liu,
2018), (Rehman et al., 2018), (Wachaja et al., 2017),
(Wilson et al., 2018) and robots (Grieco et al.,
2014), (Rehman et al., 2018), (Wachaja et al., 2017),
(Wilson et al., 2018), helps to integrate smart
devices and machines into the realization of smart
city. The rapid transmission of precise, punctual,
permanently updated information about the
environment, traffic, special events etc. is done by
connecting smart objects to the IoT internet network
(Esmaeilian et al., 2018), (Grieco et al., 2014),
(Kavitha and Geetha, 2017), (Liu, 2018), (Wilson et
al., 2018) of the smart city. The cost optimization is
an integral part of the decision-making system and
cannot lack in the management of smart city
development directions, being found in articles such
as (Kavitha and Geetha, 2017), (Liu, 2018),
(Rehman et al., 2018).
Poisonous areas are: construction sites, cement
factories and metal poles, stone quarries, car
boulevards, people houses, which can be monitored
by fixedly sensors and measuring stations, only that
pollution spreads rapidly in areas in which there are
no such sensors installed, and AWRs are extremely
useful for signalling imminent danger areas. The
rapid knowledge and analysis of alarming situations,
those in which the maximum permissible values of
particles, nanomaterials and toxic powders have
been exceeded, require a rapid reaction in real time
and solutions that by immediate implementation
diminish and prevent disasters.
Mobility AWRs is of great help in indoor /
outdoor environments for wheelchair disabled
people, blind people who want to cross the street or
travel on a particular route, for example, by pushing
/ emitting the voice command for the green colour of
the traffic light and stopping the car traffic, or by
analysing the parameters of the environment in the
areas in which the construction works take place.
A companion robot for an elder person can call the
emergency service when he observes something
unnatural or can announce the family, recall
Figure 5: Sustainable development for social systems and citizen safety aided by AWRs.
MoMa-GreenSys 2019 - Special Session on Modelling Practical Paradigms of Green Manufacturing Systems
230
various daily activities previously scheduled,
announce a life-threatening event, recite lyrics, can
work with the psyche of the afflicted, can render
self-confidence, apply to specialized service
platforms, collect and transmit data and information
etc. The person who has access to the services of
such a robot must feel safe and do not have to worry
about intimacy.
2.2 Detection, Monitoring, Control and
Navigation
AWR is structurally an open cinematic chain and
includes in its architecture subsystems and
components absolutely necessary that performs
walking, observation / detection, monitoring,
planning, communication, control and navigation
functions. Moving AWR's mechanical legs does not
give him as much control, stability, speed and safety
as in the case of human beings’ movement.
Maintaining the trajectory, reducing the constraints
and effects of disturbing factors, optimizing the
motion parameters, represent the actions necessary
to carry out the tasks.
Positioning AWR involves determining the
location, but also its orientation, relative to a
coordinate axis system. Along with the position,
sometimes speed and acceleration, force or moment
parameters are required. Navigation is the ability to
set motion safely, as simple as so complex, from one
place to another in relation to workspace landmarks.
Controllers give the platforms versatility, flexibility
and high-level interactivity to meet a growing
payload, where external disturbances are an integral
part of system equations.
Sensational feedback for efficient control is a
major desideratum, and is due to the number, type,
positioning, errors, calibration, and exploration
through sensor interpolation.
An example of AWR's integration into the social
assistance system is shown in figure 6. The focus is
on identifying important needs for an elderly or
impaired person, so that its life gets closer to the
normal one and is fit for, both indoor and outdoor
AWR assistance. The schema block used to identify
the needs of a person is shown in figure 6. This can
be used in indoor and outdoor environments.
In the smart city equation, AWRs continuously
interact with the other intelligent mobile systems
providing a new dimension of urban space,
observing phenomena, moving to dangerous places,
anticipating possible risks and indicating solutions to
avoid them, so they help to restore the balance of the
environment progressively and provide real benefits
Figure 6: Schema block to identify personal needs.
a. Industry 4.0 concept (Barreto et al., 2017)
b. AWR arm
Figure 7: AWR integration in industry 4.0 manufacturing
system (a. and b.).
to the citizens.
Another example of AWRs integration is that of
green manufacturing systems, especially the ones
based on industry 4.0 concepts (Barreto et al., 2017).
When it is rather difficult and dangerous for humans
to manipulate any materials, and when common
grippers do not ensure correct materials handling,
Anthropomorphic Walking Robots Integration in Smart Green Systems
231
special designed robotic hand (similar to human
arm) could be used see figure 7. This robotic hand
is aimed to be mounted on AWR body so that,
required position, precision and gripping forces to be
available for the manufacture process stage.
3 STANDARDIZATION OF
SMART URBAN PROCESSES
AND ACTIONS
Specific ISO standards (ISO, 2017) on sustainable
cities and communities (ISO 37100 / ISO 37120,
ISO 26000 Guidance on Social Responsibility) have
already been developed for the specific needs of the
smart city, Energy Efficiency (ISO 17742), Road
Traffic Safety (ISO 39001), Health and Safety at
Work (ISO 45001 Occupational Health and Safety),
Safety of Persons (ISO 22395 Security and
resilience Community resilience), Smart
community infrastructures (ISO 37152 / ISO 37157)
and are in the process of formulating standards that
complete the feature definition table tors.
Figure 8 comprises some of the ISO standards
regulating the specifications, predominant attributes
and qualities necessary for the smart city.
In addition to existing international ISO
standards, the smart city urgently needs good
practice guides and precise regulations to
complement those available to provide a framework
for sustainable socio-economic development. Only
in this way can the vocabulary, the objectives, the
characteristics, the structures, the control tools and
the parameters of the domains involved in this ample
process, as well as their interconnection, and the
cities between them can be defined. Experts,
scientists and researchers have the responsibility to
make sustained efforts to provide strategies and
methods for raising the community to a smart city
rank.
Figure 8: ISO standards for smarter cities (ISO, 2017).
Much of the necessary and sufficient actions to
provide the status of a smart city to an urban
settlement include: increasing the degree of political
and economic stability, a favourable climate for the
business environment, optimizing the degree of
territorial occupancy, increasing the citizens' health,
increasing the level of social assistance and welfare
(water, electricity etc.), ensuring intelligent transport
in safety, poverty alleviation, sanitation, food
security, collection, analysis and processing data,
communications and connectivity, cyber security,
environmental protection.
4 CONCLUSIONS
The primordial smart city equation is social,
economic and environmental and requires permanent
energy-controlled transformations. In order to exert
force and provide a suitable environment for people
in need of support, the phenomenon of the smart city
comprises an extensive paradigm plan, which
contains innovative, plurivalent concepts, part of the
concept proposed by us in this article Macro
SmartGreen Universe and from which there are also
AWRs. Social community and citizen safety can
have real benefits by including AWRs in smart city
life.
Despite the statements of some scientists, we are
convinced that AWRs will always be with their
creators, rewarding their efforts.
This article discusses the life of the smart city
and the compulsory integration in an accelerated
pace of AWRs for social assistance services and
citizenship safety. Systems modelling, increased
mobility, as well as their implementation in the
paradigm plan of the smart city, will emanate
strength and ensure a suitable environment for
people in need of support.
In the future, we intend to simulate AWRs
navigation and stability control in order to support
blind people both in the urban environment and in
the living space.
REFERENCES
Barreto, L., Amaral, A. and Pereira, T., 2017. Industry 4.0
implications in logistics: an overview. [online]
Available at: https:/
/www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S23519789
17306807 [Accessed 16 Jan. 2019].
Esmaeilian, B., Wang, B., Lewis, K., Duarte, F., Ratti, C.
and Behdad, S.,2018. The future of waste management
MoMa-GreenSys 2019 - Special Session on Modelling Practical Paradigms of Green Manufacturing Systems
232
in smart and sustainable cities: A review and concept
paper. [online] Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S095
6053X18305865 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Grieco, L., Rizzo, A., Colucci, S., Sicari, S., Piro, G., Di
Paola, D. and Boggia, G., 2014. IoT-aided robotics
applications: Technological implications, target
domains and open issues. [online] Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S014
0366414002783 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Iliescu, M., Vladareanu, L., Lazăr, M., Marin, D.,
Pandelea, M., Melinte, O., Pintilie I., 2016. Complex
Mechatronic System used for Obtaining Perovskite
Solar Cells. Proceedings of the Annual Symposium of
the Institute of Solid Mechanics and Session of the
Commission of Acoustics. SISOM 2017. Bucharest,
18-19 May.
Iliescu, M., Vlădăreanu, L., Pandelea, M., Mărgean, A.
and Rogojinaru, A., 2018. Looking towards Green
Energy: Solar Cells, E-Motion and Buildings in
Romania. In Romania: Environmental, Social and
Economic Issues. Sophie Clarke (Editor). Nova
Science Publishers, Inc. New York. ISBN: 978-1-
53614-590-8.
ISO, 2017.ISO and Smart City. ISBN 978-92-67-10776-9.
Kavitha, M. and Geetha, B., 2017. An efficient city energy
management system with secure routing
communication using WSN. [online] Available at:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10586-017-
1277-6 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Liu, L., 2018. IoT and A Sustainable City. [online]
Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S187
6610218308932 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Mora, L., Deakin, M. and Reid, A., 2018. Strategic
principles for smart city development: A multiple case
study analysis of European best practices. [online]
Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004
0162517318590 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Rehman, B., Yagfarov, R. and Klimchik, A., 2018.
Interactive mobile robot in a dynamic environment.
[online] Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S240
5896318330064 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Riffat, S., Powell, R. and Aydin, D., 2016. Future cities
and environmental sustainability. [online] Available
at: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40984-
016-0014-2 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Serbanica, C. and Constantin, D., 2017. Sustainable cities
in central and eastern European countries. Moving
towards smart specialization. [online] Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S019
739751630813X [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Shishehgar, M., Kerr, D. and Blake, J., 2018. A systematic
review of research into how robotic technology can
help older people. [online] Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235
2648316300149 [Accessed 16 Jan. 2019].
Silva, B., Khan, M. and Han, K., 2018. Towards
sustainable smart cities: A review of trends,
architectures, components, and open challenges in
smart cities. [online] Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221
0670717311125 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Wachaja, A., Agarwal, P., Zink, M., Adame, M., Möller,
K. and Burgard, W., 2017. Navigating blind people
with walking impairments using a smart walker.
[online] Available at:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10514-016-
9595-8 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Wilson, G., Pereyda, C., Raghunath, N., de la Cruz, G.,
Goel, S., Nesaei, S., Minor, B., Schmitter-Edgecombe,
M., Taylor, M. and Cook, D., 2018. Robot-enabled
support of daily activities in smart home
environments. [online] Available at:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S138
9041718302651 [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Yigitcanlar, T., Kamruzzaman, M., Foth, M., Sabatini-
Marques, J., da Costa, E. and Ioppolo, G., 2019. Can
cities become smart without being sustainable? A
systematic review of the literature. [online] Available
at:https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2
21067071831268X [Accessed 26 Jan. 2019].
Anthropomorphic Walking Robots Integration in Smart Green Systems
233