Design and Implementation of a Maxi-Sized Mobile Robot (Karo) for Rescue Missions
Soheil Habibian, Mehdi Dadvar, Behzad Peykari, Alireza Hosseini, M., Hossein Salehzadeh, Alireza H.M. Hosseini, and Farshid Najafi

TL;DR
This paper details the design, implementation, and evaluation of Karo, a highly mobile rescue robot with advanced dexterity and exploration capabilities, tailored for urban search and rescue missions.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive design of Karo, integrating mobility, manipulation, and control systems, and demonstrates its effectiveness through extensive field testing and performance comparisons.
Findings
Karo successfully performs standardized rescue operations.
Karo outperforms other robots in RRL test suites.
The design integrates mobility, dexterity, and control for complex environments.
Abstract
Rescue robots are expected to carry out reconnaissance and dexterity operations in unknown environments comprising unstructured obstacles. Although a wide variety of designs and implementations have been presented within the field of rescue robotics, embedding all mobility, dexterity, and reconnaissance capabilities in a single robot remains a challenging problem. This paper explains the design and implementation of Karo, a mobile robot that exhibits a high degree of mobility at the side of maintaining required dexterity and exploration capabilities for urban search and rescue (USAR) missions. We first elicit the system requirements of a standard rescue robot from the frameworks of Rescue Robot League (RRL) of RoboCup and then, propose the conceptual design of Karo by drafting a locomotion and manipulation system. Considering that, this work presents comprehensive design processes along…
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