Fig。54。6a,b  Mobile robots were introduced in the early 1980s for increased flexibility and reliability in factory logistics。

(a) The MORO (1984) developed at Fraunhofer IPA was one of the first prototypes to combine a robot arm on a wire- bound mobile platform which follows a wire buried in the floor。 (b) The KUKA omniRob features an omnidirectional platform and the LBR iiwa lightweight arm which form a highly kinematically redundant robot system (courtesy of KUKA)

Fig。54。7a–f  Examples of different designs of dual-arm robots (courtesy of (a) Motoman, (b) ABB, (c) Rethink Robotics,

(d) Kawada Industries, (e) COMAU, (f) Seiko Epson)

Fig。54。8a–d Statistics of worldwide industrial robotics use (after [54。1])。 (a) Estimated annual robot installations in selected countries (1000 units, estimate for 2015), (b) Number of multipurpose industrial robots (all types) per 10 000 employees in the automotive and in manufacturing industries 2014。 (c) Estimated worldwide annual shipments of indus- trial robots in main application areas。 (d) Estimated worldwide annual shipments of industrial robots in main industrial branches

gested to automatically load and unload machine tools (Fig。 54。6)。 Safety and power supply have been an ob- stacle to these system’s diffusion in industrial practice。 Currently, first solutions for mobile manipulation ap- pear [54。18]。

The ability to use human and robot workers either interchangeably or in workspace sharing/collaboration scenarios in human workplaces motivated the  design of anthropomorphic dual-arm robots (Fig。 54。7。 Even though industrial acceptance initially has been low, ad- vances in programming comfort, securing safe human– robot coexistence/collaboration and system cost have led to significant interest in  using dual  arms  in  ag- ile manufacturing concepts, particularly in assembly and handling applications [54。19]。 The dual-arm    sys-

tems suggest a new way of using powerful and lean type of robot which is easy to install by the man- ufacturing end-user with little adaptation of manual workplaces。

Today, industrial robotics is seen as a central pillar to future manufacturing competitiveness and economic growth:

The International Federation of Robotics (IFR) es- timates that between 2000 and 2008 the robotics industry had created 8—10 million highly qualified jobs, either  directly  or  indirectly。  The prediction is that between 2012—2020 another 4 million jobs will be created in the robot ecosystem [54。20]。 The extent  of  job  creation  by  robotics  has  been dis-

cussed controversially。 It is undisputed, however, that a wider use of robots  in  manufacturing  is able to significantly strengthen a competitive posi- tion of a company or an industrial sector [54。21]。 Economically, manufacturing productivity gains are particularly effective for economic growth。 There is no sustainable product innovation without manufac- turing competence which includes knowledge and practice of planning, designing, and operating ad- vanced robotic systems [54。22] (Fig。 54。8)。

The average price for a robot in 2014 was in the or-

der of US$ 46 800, which is about one-third of its equivalent price in 1990。 At the same time, robot performance parameters such as speed, load capac- ity, and mean time between failures (MTBF) have dramatically improved。 This means that automation has become more affordable, providing a faster re- turn on investment [54。1]。

Traditionally, robot automation has not played a sig-

上一篇:风冷双回路螺杆冷水机组英文文献和中文翻译
下一篇:起重机液压系统支腿的智能故障诊断英文文献和中文翻译

AngularJS技术介绍英文文献和中文翻译

开关电源水冷却系统英文文献和中文翻译

减数分裂和基因重组英文文献和中文翻译

太阳能最大功率点追踪和...

移动码头的泊位分配问题英文文献和中文翻译

虚拟船舶装配集成建模方...

中学生科学探究中对等论...

浅论职工思想政治工作茬...

压疮高危人群的标准化中...

STC89C52单片机NRF24L01的无线病房呼叫系统设计

浅谈高校行政管理人员的...

上海居民的社会参与研究

基于Joomla平台的计算机学院网站设计与开发

AES算法GPU协处理下分组加...

从政策角度谈黑龙江對俄...

酵母菌发酵生产天然香料...

提高教育质量,构建大學生...