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Development of a solution for adding a collaborative robot to an industrial AGV

Floyd D'Souza (Department of Mechanics, Universidade de Coimbra Departamento de Engenharia Mecanica, Coimbra, Portugal)
João Costa (Department of Mechanics, Universidade de Coimbra Departamento de Engenharia Mecanica, Coimbra, Portugal)
J. Norberto Pires (Department of Mechanics, Universidade de Coimbra Departamento de Engenharia Mecanica, Coimbra, Portugal)

Industrial Robot

ISSN: 0143-991x

Article publication date: 15 May 2020

Issue publication date: 18 August 2020

2336

Abstract

Purpose

The Industry 4.0 initiative – with its ultimate objective of revolutionizing the supply-chain – putted more emphasis on smart and autonomous systems, creating new opportunities to add flexibility and agility to automatic manufacturing systems. These systems are designed to free people from monotonous and repetitive tasks, enabling them to concentrate in knowledge-based jobs. One of these repetitive functions is the order-picking task which consists of collecting parts from storage (warehouse) and distributing them among the ordering stations. An order-picking system can also pick finished parts from working stations to take them to the warehouse. The purpose of this paper is to present a simplified model of a robotic order-picking system, i.e. a mobile manipulator composed by an automated guided vehicle (AGV), a collaborative robot (cobot) and a robotic hand.

Design/methodology/approach

Details about its implementation are also presented. The AGV is needed to safely navigate inside the factory infrastructure, namely, between the warehouse and the working stations located in the shop-floor or elsewhere. For that purpose, an ActiveONE AGV, from Active Space Automation, was selected. The collaborative robot manipulator is used to move parts from/into the mobile platform (feeding the working stations and removing parts for the warehouse). A cobot from Kassow Robots was selected (model KR 810), kindly supplied by partner companies Roboplan (Portugal) and Kassow Robotics (Denmark). An Arduino MKR1000 board was also used to interconnect the user interface, the AGV and the collaborative robot. The graphical user interface was developed in C# using the Microsoft Visual Studio 2019 IDE, taking advantage of this experience in this type of language and programming environment.

Findings

The resulting prototype was fully demonstrated in the partner company warehouse (Active Space Automation) and constitutes a possible order-picking solution, which is ready to be integrated into advanced solutions for the factories of the future.

Originality/value

A solution to fully automate the order-picking task at an industrial shop-floor was presented and fully demonstrated. The objective was to design a system that could be easy to use, to adapt to different applications and that could be a basic infrastructure for advanced order-picking systems. The system proved to work very well, executing all the features required for an order-picking system working in an Industry 4.0 scenario where humans and machines must act as co-workers. Although all the system design objectives were accomplished, there are still opportunities to improve and add features to the presented solution. In terms of improvements, a different robotic hand will be used in the final setup, depending on the type of objects that are being required to move. The amount of equipment that is located on-board of the AGV can be significantly reduced, freeing space and lowering the weight that the AGV carries. For example, the controlling computer can be substituted by a single-board-computer without any advantage. Also, the cobot should be equipped with a wrist camera to identify objects and landmark. This would allow the cobot to fully identify the position and orientation of the objects to pick and drop. The wrist camera should also use bin-picking software to fully identify the shape of the objects to pick and also their relative position (if they are randomly located in a box, for example). These features are easy to add to the developed mobile manipulator, as there are a few vision systems in the market (some that integrate with the selected cobot) that can be easily integrated in the solution. Finally, this paper reports a development effort that neglected, for practical reasons, all issues related with certification, safety, training, etc. A future follow-up paper, reporting a practical use-case implementation, will properly address those practical and operational issues.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors want to thank Ricardo Patrício (CEO) and all the teams at Active Space Automation for allowing us to use one of theirs AGVs and for sharing their warehouse for testing of the presented solution and Nuno Mineiro (CEO) and all the teams at RoboWork/Roboplan for allowing us to use a Kassow cobot. Thank you very much.

Citation

D'Souza, F., Costa, J. and Pires, J.N. (2020), "Development of a solution for adding a collaborative robot to an industrial AGV", Industrial Robot, Vol. 47 No. 5, pp. 723-735. https://doi.org/10.1108/IR-01-2020-0004

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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