ARMADA Marine Robotics Wins NSF Contract

ARMADA Marine Robotics announces that it has won a Phase I contract from the National Science Foundation (NSF) through the Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) program.

The $255,821 contract will focus on developing the company’s Asymmetric Propulsion system for underwater vehicles in collaboration with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI).  ARMADA has already signed an exclusive license with WHOI covering the use of Asymmetric Propulsion technology which was developed by company co-founders Jeff Kaeli and Robin Littlefield among others at WHOI. 

This novel technology provides both propulsion and low-speed maneuvering using a single electric motor.  This eliminates the need for fins and additional motors, thereby reducing weight, drag, complexity, and cost. This is a major advancement in the ability of a single unmanned underwater vehicle to conduct both rapid large area surveys and low-speed inspections at close range with a high degree of maneuverability not available in existing platforms. Rusty Warren, CEO of ARMADA, said “This contract allows ARMADA to take Asymmetric Propulsion to the next level. Our next major goal is to make a commercial prototype that will be tested by potential customers. These tests will give us the real-world feedback we need to proceed with our business plan to design a system that revolutionizes how the world propels underwater vehicles.” 

Click here to learn more about how ARMADA is “propelling innovation.”

Latest Issue:

Today, no frontier is beyond an offshore operator’s capacity. While Remote Marine Operations can mean different things to different ocean…

Your cON&Tent matters. Make it count.

Send us your latest corporate news, blogs or press releases.

Search