RESUMO
Decreasing batch sizes lead to an increasing demand for flexible automation systems in manufacturing industries. Robot cells are one solution for automating manufacturing tasks more flexibly. Besides the ongoing unifications in the hardware components, the controllers are still programmed application specifically and non-uniform. Only specialized experts can reconfigure and reprogram the controllers when process changes occur. To provide a more flexible control, this paper presents a new method for programming flexible skill-based controls for robot cells. In comparison to the common programming in logic controllers, operators independently adapt and expand the automated process sequence without modifying the controller code. For a high flexibility, the paper summarizes the software requirements in terms of an extensibility, flexible usability, configurability, and reusability of the control. Therefore, the skill-based control introduces a modularization of the assets in the control and parameterizable skills as abstract template class methodically. An orchestration system is used to call the skills with the corresponding parameter set and combine them into automated process sequences. A mobile flexible robot cell is used for the validation of the skill-based control architecture. Finally, the main benefits and limitations of the concept are discussed and future challenges of flexible skill-based controls for robot cells are provided.
RESUMO
The production of large components currently requires cost-intensive special machine tools with large workspaces. The corresponding process chains are usually sequential and hard to scale. Furthermore, large components are usually manufactured in small batches; consequently, the planning effort has a significant share in the manufacturing costs. This paper presents a novel approach for manufacturing large components by industrial robots and machine tools through segmented manufacturing. This leads to a decoupling of component size and necessary workspace and enables a new type of flexible and scalable manufacturing system. The presented solution is based on the automatic segmentation of the CAD model of the component into segments, which are provided with predefined connection elements. The proposed segmentation strategy divides the part into segments whose structural design is adapted to the capabilities (workspace, axis configuration, etc.) of the field components available on the shopfloor. The capabilities are provided by specific information models containing a self-description. The process planning step of each segment is automated by utilizing the similarity of the segments and the self-description of the corresponding field component. The result is a transformation of a batch size one production into an automated quasi-serial production of the segments. To generate the final component geometry, the individual segments are mounted and joined by robot-guided Direct Energy Deposition. The final surface finish is achieved by post-processing using a mobile machine tool coupled to the component. The entire approach is demonstrated along the process chain for manufacturing a forming tool.