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An
industrial robot is officially defined by
International Organization for StandardizationISO Standard 8373:1994, Manipulating Industrial Robots – Vocabulary as an
automatically controlled, reprogrammable, multipurpose manipulator programmable in three or more axes. The field of
robotics may be more practically defined as the study, design and use of robot systems for manufacturing (a top-level definition relying on the prior definition of
robot).).
Typical applications of robots include welding, painting, ironing, assembly,
wikt:pick and place,
packaging and palletizing, product inspection, and testing, all accomplished with high endurance, speed, and precision.
Robot types, features
The most commonly used robot configurations are
articulated robots, SCARA robots and gantry robots (aka Cartesian Coordinate robots, or x-y-z robots). In the context of general robotics, most types of robots would fall into the category of robot arms (inherent in the use of the word
manipulator in the above-mentioned ISO standard).Robots exhibit varying degrees of
autonomous robot:
- Some robots are programmed to faithfully carry out specific actions over and over again (repetitive actions) without variation and with a high degree of accuracy. These actions are determined by programmed routines that specify the direction, acceleration, velocity, deceleration, and distance of a series of coordinated motions.
- Other robots are much more flexible as to the orientation of the object on which they are operating or even the task that has to be performed on the object itself, which the robot may even need to identify. For example, for more precise guidance, robots often contain machine vision sub-systems acting as their "eyes", linked to powerful computers or controllers. Artificial intelligence, or what passes for it, is becoming an increasingly important factor in the modern industrial robot.
History of Industrial Robotics
George Devol applied for the first robotics patent in 1954 (granted in 1961). The first company to produce a robot was
Unimation, founded by George Devol and
Joseph F. Engelberger in 1956, and was based on Devol's original patents. Unimation robots were also called
programmable transfer machines since their main use at first was to transfer objects from one point to another, less than a dozen feet or so apart. They used
hydraulic actuators and were programmed in
joint coordinates, i.e. the angles of the various joints were stored during a teaching phase and replayed in operation. They were accurate to within 1/10,000 of an inch. Unimation later licensed their technology to Kawasaki Heavy Industries and
Guest-Nettlefolds, manufacturing Unimates in Japan and England respectively. For some time Unimation's only competitor was Cincinnati Milacron Inc. of Ohio. This changed radically in the late
1970s when several big Japanese conglomerates began producing similar industrial robots.
In
1969 Victor Scheinman at
Stanford University invented the Stanford arm, an all-electric, 6-axis
articulated robot designed to permit an
arm solution. This allowed it to accurately follow arbitrary paths in space and widened the potential use of the robot to more sophisticated applications such as assembly and welding. Scheinman then designed a second arm for the MIT AI Lab, called the "MIT arm." Scheinman, after receiving a fellowship from Unimation to develop his designs, sold those designs to Unimation who further developed them with support from General Motors Corporation and later marketed it as the Programmable Universal Machine for Assembly (PUMA).
In
1973 KUKA built its first robot, known as FAMULUS, this is the first articulated robot to have six electromechanically driven robotic axe.
Interest in robotics wikt:swelled in the late 1970s and many companies entered the field, including large firms like
General Electric, and
General Motors (which formed
joint venture FANUC Robotics with FANUC LTD of Japan). US start-ups included
Automatix and
Adept Technology, Inc. At the height of the robot boom in
1984, Unimation was acquired by
Westinghouse Electric Corporation for 107 million US dollars. Westinghouse sold Unimation to Stäubli Faverges SCA of
France in 1988. Stäubli was still making articulated robots for general industrial and clean room applications as of
2004 and even bought the robotic division of Robert Bosch GmbH in late 2004.
Eventually the myopic vision of American industry was superseded by the financial resources and strong domestic market enjoyed by the Japanese manufacturers. Only a few non-Japanese companies managed to survive in this market, including Adept Technology, Stäubli-Unimation, the Sweden-Switzerland company Asea Brown Boveri (ASEA Brown-Boveri), the Austrian manufacturer igm Robotersysteme AG and the
Germany company KUKA.
Technical description
Defining parameters
- Number of axes – two axes are required to reach any point in a plane; three axes are required to reach any point in space. To fully control the orientation of the end of the arm (i.e. the wrist) three more axes (roll, pitch and yaw) are required. Some designs (e.g. the SCARA robot) trade limitations in motion possibilities for cost, speed, and accuracy.
- Degrees of freedom (engineering) which is usually the same as the number of axes.
- Working envelope – the region of space a robot can reach.
- robot kinematics – the actual arrangement of rigid members and joints in the robot, which determines the robot's possible motions. Classes of robot kinematics include Articulated robot, Cartesian coordinate robot, Parallel robot and SCARA robot.
- Carrying capacity or payload – how much weight a robot can lift.
- Speed – how fast the robot can position the end of its arm. This may be defined in terms of the angular or linear speed of each axis or as a compound speed i.e. the speed of the end of the arm when all axes are moving.
- Acceleration - how quickly an axis can accelerate. Since this is a limiting factor a robot may not be able to reach it's specified maximum speed for movements over a short distance or a complex path requiring frequent changes of direction.
- Accuracy – how closely a robot can reach a commanded position. Accuracy can vary with speed and position within the working envelope and with payload (see compliance). It can be improved by Robot calibration.
- Repeatability - how well the robot will return to a programmed position. This is not the same as accuracy. It may be that when told to go to a certain X-Y-Z position that it gets only to within 1mm of that position. This would be it's accuracy which may be improved by calibration. But if that position is taught into controller memory and each time it is sent there it returns to within 0.1mm of the taught position then the repeatability will be within 0.1mm.
- Motion control – for some applications, such as simple pick-and-place assembly, the robot need merely return repeatably to a limited number of pre-taught positions. For more sophisticated applications, such as arc welding, motion must be continuously controlled to follow a path in space, with controlled orientation and velocity.
- Power source – some robots use electric motors, others use hydraulic actuators. The former are faster, the latter are stronger and advantageous in applications such as spray painting, where a spark could set off an explosion.
- Drive – some robots connect electric motors to the joints via gears; others connect the motor to the joint directly (direct drive). Using gears results in measurable 'backlash' which is free movement in an axis. In smaller robot arms with DC electric motors, because DC motors are high speed low torque motors they frequently require high ratios so that backlash is a problem. In such cases the harmonic drive is often used.
- Compliance - this is a measure of the amount in angle or distance that a robot axis will move when a force is applied to it. Because of compliance when a robot goes to a position carrying it's maximum payload it will be at a position slightly lower than when it is carrying no payload. Compliance can also be responsible for overshoot when carrying high payloads in which case acceleration would need to be reduced.
Robot programming and interfaces
The setup or programming of motions and sequences for an industrial robot is typically taught by linking the robot controller to a laptop, desktop
computer or (internal or Internet)
computer network.
Software: The computer is installed with corresponding Interface (computer science) software. The use of a computer greatly simplifies the programming process. Specialized
robot software is run either in the robot controller or in the computer or both depending on the system design.
Teach Pendant: Robots can also be taught via
teach pendant, a handheld control and programming unit. The common feature of such units are the ability to manually send the robot to a desired position, or inch or jog to adjust a position. They also have a means to change the speed since a low speed is usually required for careful positioning. A large emergency stop button is usually included as well. Typically once the robot has been programmed there is no more use for the teach pendant.
Lead-by-the-nose is a technique offered by most robot manufacturers but is of dubious value. While user holds the robot end effector another person enters a command which de-energizes the robot and it goes limp. The user then moves the robot by hand to the required positions or along a required path while the software logs these positions into memory. The program can later run the robot to these positions or along the taught path. This technique was popular for tasks such as spray painting.
Others In addition, machine operators often use
User Interface devices, typically
touch screen units, which serve as the operator control panel. The operator can switch from program to program, make adjustments within a program and also operate a host of peripheral devices that may be integrated within the same robotic system. These include
end effectors, feeders that supply components to the robot, conveyor belt, emergency stop controls,
machine vision systems, safety interlock (engineering) systems, bar code printers and an almost infinite array of other industrial devices which are accessed and controlled via the operator control panel.
The teach pendant or PC is usually disconnected after programming and the robot then runs on the program that has been installed in its
controller. However a computer is often used to 'supervise' the robot and any peripherals.
A robot and a collection of machines or peripherals is referred to as a
workcell, or cell. A typical cell might contain a parts feeder, a injection molding machine and a robot. The various machines are 'integrated' and controlled by a single computer or
Programmable logic controller.
End Effectors
The most essential robot peripheral is the end effector without which the robot cannot do anything. Obvious examples are grippers which are devices that can
grasp an object, usually
electromechanics or
pneumatic. Another common means of picking up an object is by vacuum. End effectors are frequently highly complex, made to match the handled product and often capable of picking up an array of the products at one time.
Movement and singularities
Most articulated robots perform by storing a series of positions in memory, and moving to them at various times in their programming sequence. For example, a robot which is moving items from one place to another might have a simple 'pick and place' program similar to the following:
Define points P1–P5:
Safely above workpiece (defined as P1)
10 cm Above bin A (defined as P2)
At position to take part from bin A (defined as P3)
10 cm Above bin B (defined as P4)
At position to take part from bin B. (defined as p5)
Define program:
Move to P1
Move to P2
Move to P3
Close gripper
Move to P4
Move to P5
Open gripper
Move to P1 and finish
For a given robot the only parameters necessary to locate the end effector (gripper, welding torch, etc.) of the robot completely are the angles of each of the joints or displacements of the linear axes (or combinations of the two for robot formats such as SCARA). However there are many different ways to define the points. The most common and most convenient way of defining a point is to specify a
Cartesian coordinate for it, i.e. the position of the 'end effector' in mm in the X, Y and Z directions. In addition the angles of the end effector in pitch, roll and yaw and the length of the tool must also be specified, depending on the types of joints a particular robot may have. For a jointed arm these coordinates must be converted to joint angles by the robot controller and such conversions are known as Cartesian Transformations which may need to be performed iteratively or recursively for a multiple axis robot. The mathematics of the relationship between joint angles and actual spatial coordinates is called kinematics. See robot control
Positioning by Cartesian coordinates may be done by entering the coordinates into the system or by using a teach pendant which moves the robot in X-Y-Z directions. It is much easier for a human operator to visualize motions up/down, left right etc. than to move each joint one at a time. When the desired position is reached it is then defined in some way peculiar to the robot software in use, e.g. P1 - P5 above.
Recent and future developments
As of 2005, the robotic arm business is approaching a mature state, where they can provide enough speed, accuracy and ease of use for most of the applications. Vision guidance (aka machine vision) is bringing a lot of flexibility to robotic cells. So we have the arm and the eye, but the part that still has poor flexibility is the hand: the end effector attached to a robot is often a simple pneumatic, 2-position wrench. This doesn't allow the robotic cell to easily handle different parts, in different orientations.
Hand-in-hand with increasing off-line programmed applications,
robot calibration is becoming more and more important in order to guarantee a good positioning accuracy.
Other developments include downsizing industrial arms for consumer applications (micro-robotic arms), manufacture of domestic robots and using industrial arms in combination with more intelligent Automated Guided Vehicles (AGVs) to make the Logistics automation more flexible between pick-up and drop-off.
Prices of robots will vary with the features, but are usually from 12,000 USD for an
wikt:entry-level model, and as much as 100,000 or more for a wikt:heavy-duty, long reach robot.
Robot Manufacturers
Notes
See also
References
- Nof, Shimon Y. (editor) (1999). Handbook of Industrial Robotics, 2nd ed. John Wiley & Sons. 1378 pp. ISBN 0-471-17783-0.
A comprehensive reference on the categories and applications of industrial robotics.
External links
- Industrial robots and robot system safety (by OSHA, so in the public domain).
- Robotic Industries Association.
Industrial Robot Language from FOLDOC
Industrial Robot Language < language, robotics > (IRL) A high-level language for programming industrial robots. ["IRL, Industrial Robot Language", DIN 66312, Beuth-Verlag 1992].
Industrial Robot an International Journal Online
Industrial Robot
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