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From havoc to harvest

Project Evergreen provides an innovative approach to weeding large tree nurseries

Each year, Professor John Shovic awards the 鈥淐rown of Destruction鈥 to the student who wreaks the most havoc in the Center for Intelligent Industrial Robotics in Coeur d鈥橝lene. The tongue-in-cheek honor may go to Brent Knopp this year, but the solution arising from the damage could boost reforestation efforts in Idaho and nationwide.

The U.S. Forest Service called on Shovic and his students to develop an efficient solution to eliminating weeds from its nurseries. The U of I team embarked on Project Evergreen to build a machine that can autonomously move through a nursery, locate, identify and kill destructive weeds.

As Knopp and the Project Evergreen team built their robot designed to clear weeds from tree nurseries, challenges emerged. But when it comes to innovation, sometimes things must break before a breakthrough.

This project is everything I envisioned for graduate school. I wanted to apply machine learning to robots, and the scope of work in this project is great experience. Brent Knopp, U of I graduate student

鈥淭he high voltage on the weed-killing mechanism was coupling with the frame, and we blew up the robot two days before a demonstration for six nurseries,鈥 Shovic said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when Brent earned the 鈥楥rown of Destruction.鈥 We give it to the student that does the most damage 鈥 whoever does the best job Vandalizing stuff.鈥

Nurseries can spend up to $100,000 annually on weeding and frequently struggle to find workers willing to do the monotonous task. The U of I robotics group tackled the challenge by designing an autonomous, GPS-guided robot equipped with a camera and an AI system to identify weeds and a subsystem to kill the weeds.

Shovic tapped Garrett Wells to lead the project. The computer science doctoral student welcomed the challenge.

鈥淚t was definitely daunting to have a project that has so many different components, from hardware to software,鈥 said Wells, who earned his bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees at U of I. 鈥淲e鈥檙e really fortunate with the people that came together on the team.鈥

Knopp earned his bachelor鈥檚 degree in electrical engineering before starting his master鈥檚 in computer science, so the team relied on his expertise to develop the weed-killing component. After much brainstorming and experimentation, the Navy veteran designed an electric zapper to electrocute and kill weeds.

Three graduate students stand next to the weeding robot.
A team from the 果冻传媒麻豆社 Robotics program recently built a wheeled robot that uses electricity to kill weeds in U.S. Forest Service nursery seedling beds in Coeur d鈥橝lene.

The explosive setback days before their demonstration eventually led to solutions. Redemption came last summer when the team demonstrated its prototype robot for the Forest Service.

鈥淚t felt really great to show them our work,鈥 Knopp said.

The next steps for the project include adding an autonomous computer that identifies weeds to run the AI program. After that, all the computer systems must be integrated. Commercial production of the weed-killing robot is likely years away, but the students continue to expand upon Project Evergreen, gaining tremendous skills in the process.

鈥淭his project is everything I envisioned for graduate school,鈥 Knopp said. 鈥淚 wanted to apply machine learning to robots, and the scope of work in this project is great experience.鈥


Article by Todd Mordhorst, University Communications and Marketing

Photos by Melissa Hartley, Visual Productions, Ralph Bartholdt, Communications

Published in April 2025

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