Designing drones that can fly in air ducts
2025-07-29
(Press-News.org) Air ducts: a contemporary issue for safety inspection
Air ducts are everywhere in modern buildings and underground networks, but are challenging to access for inspection. Their narrow dimensions and inability to support human weight prevent essential interventions to maintain air quality, heating, and air conditioning.
Small quadrotor drones offer a potential solution for exploring these air ducts because they can navigate both horizontal and vertical sections. However, they create airflows that recirculate inside the duct and destabilize the drone, creating important turbulences in an environment that has little space for error.
Mapping the aerodynamic forces in a circular air duct
The team first investigated how the air circulates depending on the position of the drone in the air duct. To do so, they used a robotic arm and a force/torque sensor to measure the forces at hundreds of positions. This first “map” of forces shows a complex aerodynamic pattern and makes it possible to identify the “unsafe” parts of circular ducts, where the air recirculations push the drone towards the walls, and a safer position, where the recirculation forces cancel out.
Flying and hovering small quadrotors in small air ducts
To maintain its position at the recommended point, the drone needs to know its current position in an environment which is typically dark and without any visual cues. The team combined small lasers and artificial intelligence (a neural network trained on motion capture data) to allow the small drone to stay in the position with the smallest turbulences, hence flying in a safer and more stable way.
A step toward many applications
The results of this research open new and promising application domains for drones in industrial inspection and public safety. The next step is to develop a more application-oriented prototype with useful payloads, like cameras, thermal cameras, or gas sensors.
A large-scale collaborative project
This study was led by Inria Senior Researcher Jean-Baptiste Mouret and PhD student Thomas Martin, both from the project-team HUCEBOT, a joint venture between CNRS, Inria and Université de Lorraine, within the Centre Inria at the University of Lorraine and the Lorraine Research Laboratory in Computer Science and its Applications (CNRS/University of Lorraine). It is a collaboration with the Institut des sciences du Mouvement - Etienne-Jules Marey (Aix-Marseille Université/CNRS) and the Laboratoire de Conception, Fabrication, Commande (Université de Lorraine). This work reflects the strength of the partnerships between the French institutions that are Aix-Marseille Université, CNRS, Université de Lorraine, and Inria.
References
Scientific article: https://www.nature.com/articles/s44182-025-00032-5
Citation: Thomas Martin, Adrien Guénard, Vladislav Tempez, Lucien Renaud, Thibaut Raharijaona, Franck Ruffier & Jean-Baptiste Mouret. Flying in air ducts. npj Robotics 3, 16 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s44182-025-00032-5
Media (videos, photos)
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7je2hUnGwms
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[Press-News.org] Designing drones that can fly in air ducts