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Main Authors: Turrisi, Giulio, Bratta, Angelo, Minelli, Giovanni, Abati, Gabriel Fischer, Rad, Amir H., Soares, João Carlos Virgolino, Semini, Claudio
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.10529
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author Turrisi, Giulio
Bratta, Angelo
Minelli, Giovanni
Abati, Gabriel Fischer
Rad, Amir H.
Soares, João Carlos Virgolino
Semini, Claudio
author_facet Turrisi, Giulio
Bratta, Angelo
Minelli, Giovanni
Abati, Gabriel Fischer
Rad, Amir H.
Soares, João Carlos Virgolino
Semini, Claudio
contents Litter pollution represents a growing environmental problem affecting natural and urban ecosystems worldwide. Waste discarded in public spaces often accumulates in areas that are difficult to access, such as uneven terrains, coastal environments, parks, and roadside vegetation. Over time, these materials degrade and release harmful substances, including toxic chemicals and microplastics, which can contaminate soil and water and pose serious threats to wildlife and human health. Despite increasing awareness of the problem, litter collection is still largely performed manually by human operators, making large-scale cleanup operations labor-intensive, time-consuming, and costly. Robotic solutions have the potential to support and partially automate environmental cleanup tasks. In this work, we present a quadruped robotic system designed for autonomous litter collection in challenging outdoor scenarios. The robot combines the mobility advantages of legged locomotion with a manipulation system consisting of a robotic arm and an onboard litter container. This configuration enables the robot to detect, grasp, and store litter items while navigating through uneven terrains. The proposed system aims to demonstrate the feasibility of integrating perception, locomotion, and manipulation on a legged robotic platform for environmental cleanup tasks. Experimental evaluations conducted in outdoor scenarios highlight the effectiveness of the approach and its potential for assisting large-scale litter removal operations in environments that are difficult to reach with traditional robotic platforms. The code associated with this work can be found at: https://github.com/iit-DLSLab/trash-collection-isaaclab.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_10529
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle BinWalker: Development and Field Evaluation of a Quadruped Manipulator Platform for Sustainable Litter Collection
Turrisi, Giulio
Bratta, Angelo
Minelli, Giovanni
Abati, Gabriel Fischer
Rad, Amir H.
Soares, João Carlos Virgolino
Semini, Claudio
Robotics
Litter pollution represents a growing environmental problem affecting natural and urban ecosystems worldwide. Waste discarded in public spaces often accumulates in areas that are difficult to access, such as uneven terrains, coastal environments, parks, and roadside vegetation. Over time, these materials degrade and release harmful substances, including toxic chemicals and microplastics, which can contaminate soil and water and pose serious threats to wildlife and human health. Despite increasing awareness of the problem, litter collection is still largely performed manually by human operators, making large-scale cleanup operations labor-intensive, time-consuming, and costly. Robotic solutions have the potential to support and partially automate environmental cleanup tasks. In this work, we present a quadruped robotic system designed for autonomous litter collection in challenging outdoor scenarios. The robot combines the mobility advantages of legged locomotion with a manipulation system consisting of a robotic arm and an onboard litter container. This configuration enables the robot to detect, grasp, and store litter items while navigating through uneven terrains. The proposed system aims to demonstrate the feasibility of integrating perception, locomotion, and manipulation on a legged robotic platform for environmental cleanup tasks. Experimental evaluations conducted in outdoor scenarios highlight the effectiveness of the approach and its potential for assisting large-scale litter removal operations in environments that are difficult to reach with traditional robotic platforms. The code associated with this work can be found at: https://github.com/iit-DLSLab/trash-collection-isaaclab.
title BinWalker: Development and Field Evaluation of a Quadruped Manipulator Platform for Sustainable Litter Collection
topic Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.10529