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Frederick M. Proctor, John L. Michaloski, Marek Franaszek
Abstract
The ability to be programmed for a wide range of tasks is what differentiates robots from dedicated automation. Consequently, robots can be faced with often-changing requirements and conditions. Conventional application development based on teach programming takes robots out of production and occupies personnel, limiting their effectiveness in these environments. Off-line programming solves these problems, but robot inaccuracy must be compensated by a combination of calibration, compliance, and sensing. This complicates up-front systems engineering and application development, but results in systems that can operate in a wider range of requirements and conditions. Performance can be optimized if application tolerances and process uncertainties are known. If they often change, optimization must be done dynamically. Automating this optimization is a goal of smart manufacturing. With its trend of increasing connectivity between the components of robotic systems both within workcells and to the enterprise, exchanging this information has become more important. This includes tolerance information from design through process planning to production and inspection, and measurement uncertainty from sensors into operations. Standards such as ISO 10303 (STEP), the Quality Information Framework (QIF), the Robot Operating System (ROS), and MTConnect support this exchange to varying degrees. Examples include the assignment of assembly tasks based on part tolerances and robot capabilities; the automated generation of robot paths with tolerances arising from sensed obstacles; and the optimization of part placement to minimize the effects of position uncertainty. This paper examines the requirements for exchanging tolerance and uncertainty in robotics applications, identifies how these requirements are being met by existing standards, and suggests improvements that can enable more automated information exchange.
Proceedings Title
Proceedings of the 2017 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition
Conference Dates
November 3-9, 2017
Conference Location
Tampa, FL, US
Conference Title
International Mechanical Engineering Congress & Exposition
Proctor, F.
, Michaloski, J.
and Franaszek, M.
(2017),
Tolerances and Uncertainty in Robotic Systems, Proceedings of the 2017 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Tampa, FL, US, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=923205
(Accessed December 26, 2024)