The Grasping, Manipulation, and Contact Safety project will develop and standardize performance metrics, test methods, and associated measurement tools that support the development of robotic systems that have human-like dexterity and force-control characteristics. These types of robotic systems enable tactual-based safe human collaboration and contact-rich manufacturing operations, such as assembly, while addressing the barriers to automation faced by low-volume, high-mix manufacturing environments.
As collaborative robot systems continue to expand their presence on manufacturing floors due to their ability to work in close proximity with humans by limiting forces and pressures exerted on external objects, further research is needed to develop performance tests to validate that collaborative robot systems are indeed safe when deployed. Advanced grasping and manipulation technology is maturing and is closer to broader commercialization and adoption. Standardized test methods will help to further progress research and will lead to widespread characterization of macro-scale grasping and manipulation systems (part sizes greater than 1 mm, with accuracies greater than 25 microns). Such performance tests will address end-effectors, robot manipulators (including bimanual manipulation systems – i.e., two robots manipulating a single rigid object), robotic assembly systems, and physics-based simulation tools supporting contact rich robotic tasks.
Objective
To provide performance metrics, test methods, and associated measurement tools to support next-generation robotic systems having human-like dexterity and force control characteristics.
Technical Idea
The force sensing and compliance capabilities used in collaborative robots to prevent injuries and enable them to work safely alongside human workers, as well as robotic end- effector technologies with advanced force control and manipulation are quickly evolving to support high-mix, low-volume manufacturing tasks. Examples include the use of passive or active compliance and force control for part insertion into assemblies or for adapting to part geometries while performing surfacing operations.
The project will continue long standing work and leadership within existing standards bodies focusing on industrial robot safety, and specifically within ISO/TC 299 on Robotics and ANSI/RIA R15.06 Subcommittee on Industrial Robot Safety, and will help develop new grasping and manipulation performance standards through ASTM International Committee F45 on Robotics, Automation, and Autonomous Systems. Using unique testbeds and the development of metrics, test methods, artifacts, and measurement tools, the project will support safe human-robot collaboration and will help gauge the performance of robotic grasping and manipulation.
Research Plan
Major Accomplishments
Standards Development
Datasets
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