A design of a controller as a component of a robotic manufacturing system - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University

A design of a controller as a component of a robotic manufacturing system

Paul S. Fussell, P. K. Wright, and David Bourne
Journal Article, Journal of Manufacturing Systems, Vol. 3, No. 1, pp. 1 - 11, January, 1984

Abstract

This paper specifies the functional design of a robot or machine tool controller suitable for inclusion in robotic manufacturing systems. The principle interest is the unmanned manufacturing cells which are being developed as major components of new manufacturing facilities. The functional specifications are motivated by recent experiences with the creation of a prototype cell for an open die forging process. There are two key technical design requirements. The first relates to the robot or machine tool being controlled. The controller must direct the machine actions, and, for unmanned operation, the controller must receive and process sensor information for process modification and for fault tolerance. The second relates to communication with the central cell computer (the host). The operation of an unmanned system requires a robot communication channel between the host and the controller; the controller must also respond to a variety of instructions transmitted from the host. Additional controller design requirements are imposed by economics. The proposed controller can be used today, and can develop in an evolutionary manner to meet the needs of future manufacturing systems. The evolutionary development is made possible by modular design, organized in a hierarchical manner.

BibTeX

@article{Fussell-1984-121550,
author = {Paul S. Fussell and P. K. Wright and David Bourne},
title = {A design of a controller as a component of a robotic manufacturing system},
journal = {Journal of Manufacturing Systems},
year = {1984},
month = {January},
volume = {3},
number = {1},
pages = {1 - 11},
}