Friday 19 April 2024

DHL parcelcopter launches initial operations for research purposes

 

Emergency delivery of medicines andother urgent goods to North Sea island of Juist

DHL Parcel is about to launch a unique pilot project on the North Sea island of Juist. For the first time worldwide, medication and other urgently needed goods will be delivered to the island at certain times of the day by DHL parcelcopter. This research project represents the first time that a flight by an unmanned aircraft will be operated outside the pilot’s field of vision in a real-life mission in Europe.

By taking this step, DHL Parcel has moved to the next phase of the parcelcopter research project it launched last December. Working with its two research and development partners, the Institute of Flight System Dynamics at RWTH Aachen University and Microdrones GmbH, DHL Parcel has completed a comprehensive consultation and approval process led by Lower Saxony’s Ministry for Economics, Labour and Transport.

In co-ordination with DFS Deutsche Flugsicherung GmbH, the German Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure has established a restricted flight area exclusively for this research project. In addition to the island of Juist and the city of Norden, the Wattenmeer national park administrative unit approved the parcelcopter flights.

Since its maiden flight last December, the DHL parcelcopter has been modified to perform this specific type of mission. The research team optimised aspects like flight duration, flight range and speed to address the special challenges posed by the wind and marine weather conditions of the North Sea.

“Our DHL parcelcopter 2.0 is already one of the safest and most reliable flight systems in its class that meets the requirements needed to fulfil such a mission,” said Jürgen Gerdes, CEO of Deutsche Post DHL’s Post – eCommerce – Parcel Division. “We are proud that this additional service can create added value for the residents of and visitors to the island of Juist and are pleased with the support we have received from the communities and agencies involved.”

First autonomous delivery flights by DHL parcelcopter

The technical innovations of the DHL parcelcopter include extended flight duration and range – the flight route to the island of Juist is roughly 12 km. The flight will be completely automated for the first time. This means that a pilot does not have to take any action at all during any phase of the flight.

For safety reasons and in compliance with the requirements set by the responsible agencies, the DHL parcelcopter will be constantly monitored during the flight by a mobile ground station in Norddeich so that manual action can be taken immediately in real time if a malfunction or emergency occurs. The ground station will also maintain constant contact with air traffic controllers.

To ensure that the DHL parcelcopter operates reliably, flies safely and always lands at the right location, an autopilot with automated take-off and landing functions was developed. This system is robust and reliable, and has been extensively tested. At an altitude of 50 m, the parcelcopter can travel up to 18 m per second, depending on the wind speed.

It will primarily transport medications from the mainland to Juist at certain times during the week and on weekends. This delivery option will focus on times when such alternatives as ferries and flights are not available.

The parcelcopter will take off from the harbour in Norddeich. It will land at a launch pad and landing field on Juist reserved specifically for the parcelcopter. From there, a DHL courier will then deliver the goods to the recipient. To optimally secure the goods during transport, DHL Parcel developed a special air-transport container that is extremely lightweight as well as weather- and waterproof.

Ordering medications on the island

The medications to be transported can be ordered from the research project’s collaboration partner on Juist, Seehund pharmacy. Once the project takes off, vacationers and island residents can find out more about how they can place orders thanks to the research project at www.dhl.de/paketkopter.

Since the parcelcopter’s first test flights, during which medications were transported from one bank of the Rhine River in Bonn to the other, DHL Parcel has systematically pressed forward with the research project and expanded collaboration with its competent research and development partners.

The Institute for Flight System Dynamics at RWTH Aachen University is new to the project team. It focuses on the optimisation, modelling, simulation and control of highly automated aircraft. One of the institute’s areas of specialisation is the safe and robust operation of unmanned aircraft for very different missions under challenging environmental and weather conditions.

“With the DHL parcelcopter, an unmanned aircraft operating outside the controller’s field of vision will perform deliveries for the first time in a real-world mission. Without the extremely high level of willingness to innovate and to find solutions exhibited by the involved agencies, communities and the Wattenmeer administrative unit of Lower Saxony, such a project would not be possible,” Mr Gerdes emphasised.

Another important development partner is Microdrones GmbH, one of the leading providers of automated copters. It has been involved in the project from the very beginning and developed the DHL parcelcopter on the basis of one of its flight platforms.

Currently, there are no specific plans to use the DHL parcelcopter in normal parcel delivery operations. This phase of the research project will test and evaluate the possibilities of such delivery methods. To the extent that it is technically feasible and economically sensible, the use of parcelcopters to deliver urgently needed goods to thinly populated or remote areas or in emergencies is an interesting option for the future.