scholarly journals Do Speed and Proximity Affect Human-Robot Collaboration with an Industrial Robot Arm?

Author(s):  
Matthew Story ◽  
Phil Webb ◽  
Sarah R. Fletcher ◽  
Gilbert Tang ◽  
Cyril Jaksic ◽  
...  

AbstractCurrent guidelines for Human-Robot Collaboration (HRC) allow a person to be within the working area of an industrial robot arm whilst maintaining their physical safety. However, research into increasing automation and social robotics have shown that attributes in the robot, such as speed and proximity setting, can influence a person’s workload and trust. Despite this, studies into how an industrial robot arm’s attributes affect a person during HRC are limited and require further development. Therefore, a study was proposed to assess the impact of robot’s speed and proximity setting on a person’s workload and trust during an HRC task. Eighty-three participants from Cranfield University and the ASK Centre, BAE Systems Samlesbury, completed a task in collaboration with a UR5 industrial robot arm running at different speeds and proximity settings, workload and trust were measured after each run. Workload was found to be positively related to speed but not significantly related to proximity setting. Significant interaction was not found for trust with speed or proximity setting. This study showed that even when operating within current safety guidelines, an industrial robot can affect a person’s workload. The lack of significant interaction with trust was attributed to the robot’s relatively small size and high success rate, and therefore may have an influence in larger industrial robots. As workload and trust can have a significant impact on a person’s performance and satisfaction, it is key to understand this relationship early in the development and design of collaborative work cells to ensure safe and high productivity.

Author(s):  
Vladimir Kuts ◽  
Tauno Otto ◽  
Toivo Tähemaa ◽  
Khuldoon Bukhari ◽  
Tengiz Pataraia

The use of industrial robots in modern manufacturing scenarios is a rising trend in the engineering industry. Currently, industrial robots are able to perform pre-programmed tasks very efficiently irrespective of time and complexity. However, often robots encounter unknown scenarios and to solve those, they need to cooperate with humans, leading to unnecessary downtime of the machine and the need for human intervention. The main aim of this study is to propose a method to develop adaptive industrial robots using Machine Learning (ML)/Machine Vision (MV) tools. The proposed method aims to reduce the effort of re-programming and enable self-learning in industrial robots. The elaborated online programming method can lead to fully automated industrial robotic cells in accordance with the human-robot collaboration standard and provide multiple usage options of this approach in the manufacturing industry. Machine Vision (MV) tools used for online programming allow industrial robots to make autonomous decisions during sorting or assembling operations based on the color and/or shape of the test object. The test setup consisted of an industrial robot cell, cameras and LIDAR connected to MATLAB through a Robot Operation System (ROS). The online programming tests and simulations were performed using Virtual/Augmented Reality (VR/AR) toolkits together with a Digital Twin (DT) concept, to test the industrial robot program on a digital object before executing it on the real object, thus creating a safe and secure test environment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilbert Tang ◽  
Phil Webb

In industrial human-robot collaboration, variability commonly exists in the operation environment and the components, which induces uncertainty and error that require frequent manual intervention for rectification. Conventional teach pendants can be physically demanding to use and require user training prior to operation. Thus, a more effective control interface is required. In this paper, the design and evaluation of a contactless gesture control system using Leap Motion is described. The design process involves the use of RULA human factor analysis tool. Separately, an exploratory usability test was conducted to compare three usability aspects between the developed gesture control system and an off-the-shelf conventional touchscreen teach pendant. This paper focuses on the user-centred design methodology of the gesture control system. The novelties of this research are the use of human factor analysis tools in the human-centred development process, as well as the gesture control design that enable users to control industrial robot’s motion by its joints and tool centre point position. The system has potential to use as an input device for industrial robot control in a human-robot collaboration scene. The developed gesture control system was targeting applications in system recovery and error correction in flexible manufacturing environment shared between humans and robots. The system allows operators to control an industrial robot without the requirement of significant training.


Author(s):  
Hoai Nam Huynh ◽  
Edouard Rivière-Lorphèvre ◽  
Olivier Verlinden

One of the most promising manufacturing technologies nowadays is certainly the material removal using an industrial robot. Robotic machining is a fast growing technology as the number of robots used in industry is increasing continuously. Robots are indeed flexible which allows them to deal with large workpieces. On the other hand, their low stiffness restricts their use to machining operations accommodating a low accuracy or involving limited cutting forces as milling instabilities are more likely to occur. Since the impact of the machining process on the robot structure is not fully understood at this time, this paper aims to provide an in-depth analysis of experimental data obtained while machining an aluminium plate with a Stäubli robot arm. After describing the experimental set-up, three different analyses (metrological, vibration, cutting forces) were carried out on the basis of the machined workpiece and the measured signals. An identification of the cutting coefficients was eventually performed in order to fit a cutting force model to the measurements. Simulation results showed a good correlation with the experimental measurements.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 379-391
Author(s):  
Matthew Story ◽  
Cyril Jaksic ◽  
Sarah R. Fletcher ◽  
Philip Webb ◽  
Gilbert Tang ◽  
...  

Abstract Although the principles followed by modern standards for interaction between humans and robots follow the First Law of Robotics popularized in science fiction in the 1960s, the current standards regulating the interaction between humans and robots emphasize the importance of physical safety. However, they are less developed in another key dimension: psychological safety. As sales of industrial robots have been increasing over recent years, so has the frequency of human–robot interaction (HRI). The present article looks at the current safety guidelines for HRI in an industrial setting and assesses their suitability. This article then presents a means to improve current standards utilizing lessons learned from studies into human aware navigation (HAN), which has seen increasing use in mobile robotics. This article highlights limitations in current research, where the relationships established in mobile robotics have not been carried over to industrial robot arms. To understand this, it is necessary to focus less on how a robot arm avoids humans and more on how humans react when a robot is within the same space. Currently, the safety guidelines are behind the technological advance, however, with further studies aimed at understanding HRI and applying it to newly developed path finding and obstacle avoidance methods, science fiction can become science fact.


Author(s):  
Aravinthkumar T ◽  
Suresh M ◽  
Vinod B

The abstract must be a precise and reflection of what is in your article. Manufacturing sector is moving towards industry 4.0 and demands a high end of automation in the process. In which industrial robots play a fundamental role for automating the processes such as pick and place, material handling, palletizing, welding, painting, assembly lines and many more endless applications. Increasing demand and necessity made more research on industrial robots, machine learning and artificial intelligence. Better kinematic analysis of robots leads to reliable, high precise and fast responsive system. But there is an absence of India based robot manufacturers to fulfil the rising demand. Again, this situation leads to a market for foreign robot makers instead of local players. Lack of knowledge in robotics, unavailability of robot parts and resources are pain points for this cause. As researchers in this domain and have a goal to resolve this issue by providing open source, easily accessible industrial robot technical resources to everyone. This research work focuses the design and development of 6 Degrees of Freedom articulated robot arm with kinematic analysis particularly forward and inverse kinematics.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (23) ◽  
pp. 8666
Author(s):  
Rabab Benotsmane ◽  
László Dudás ◽  
György Kovács

The application of the Industry 4.0′s elements—e.g., industrial robots—has a key role in the efficiency improvement of manufacturing companies. In order to reduce cycle times and increase productivity, the trajectory optimization of robot arms is essential. The purpose of the study is the elaboration of a new “whip-lashing” method, which, based on the motion of a robot arm, is similar to the motion of a whip. It results in achieving the optimized trajectory of the robot arms in order to increase velocity of the robot arm’s parts, thereby minimizing motion cycle times and to utilize the torque of the joints more effectively. The efficiency of the method was confirmed by a case study, which is relating to the trajectory planning of a five-degree-of-freedom RV-2AJ manipulator arm using SolidWorks and MATLAB software applications. The robot was modelled and two trajectories were created: the original path and path investigate the effects of using the whip-lashing induced robot motion. The application of the method’s algorithm resulted in a cycle time saving of 33% compared to the original path of RV-2AJ robot arm. The main added value of the study is the elaboration and implementation of the newly elaborated “whip-lashing” method which results in minimization of torque consumed; furthermore, there was a reduction of cycle times of manipulator arms’ motion, thus increasing the productivity significantly. The efficiency of the new “whip-lashing” method was confirmed by a simulation case study.


Robotics ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Doria ◽  
Cocuzza ◽  
Comand ◽  
Bottin ◽  
Rossi

In robotic processes, the compliance of the robot arm plays a very important role. In some conditions, for example, in robotic assembly, robot arm compliance can compensate for small position and orientation errors of the end-effector. In other processes, like machining, robot compliance may generate chatter vibrations with an impairment in the quality of the machined surface. In industrial robots, the compliance of the end-effector is chiefly due to joint compliances. In this paper, joint compliances of a serial six-joint industrial robot are identified with a novel modal method making use of specific modes of vibration dominated by the compliance of only one joint. Then, in order to represent the effect of the identified compliances on robot performance in an intuitive and geometric way, a novel kinematic method based on the concept of “Mozzi axis” of the end-effector is presented and discussed.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 1777
Author(s):  
Ivan Kuric ◽  
Vladimír Tlach ◽  
Milan Sága ◽  
Miroslav Císar ◽  
Ivan Zajačko

Renishaw Ballbar QC20–W is primarily intended for diagnostics of CNC machine tools, but it is also used in connection with industrial robots. In the case of standard measurement, when the measuring plane is parallel to the robot base, not all robot joints move. The purpose of the experiments of the present article was to verify the hypothesis of the motion of all the robot joints when the desired circular path is placed on an inclined plane. In the first part of the conducted experiments is established hypothesis is confirmed, through positional analysis on a simulation model of the robot. They are then carried out practical measurements being evaluated the influence of individual robot joints to deform the circular path, shown as a polar graph. As a result, it is found that in the case of the robot used, changing the configuration of the robot arm has the greatest effect on changing the shape of the polar graph.


Robotica ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 243-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ajit M. Karnik ◽  
Naresh K. Sinha

SUMMARYFor the past several years, industrial robots are being used extensively. These robots are generally equipped with relatively simple control systems. Such control systems have proved adequate, but with increased demand on robot performance, there is need for advanced and sophisticated controllers. One of the probelms in the control of robots is that system dynamics change due to several factors such as the orientation of arms and their effective inertia.Adaptive controllers have the advantage that the system is continuously modelled and controller parameters are evaluated on-line, thus resulting in superior performance. Adaptive controllers can be realized in several ways.This paper describes the design and performance of an explicit self tuning regulator for a robot arm.


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