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Zukünftige Montagearbeitsplätze müssen veränderten Herausforderungen, wie z. B. der zunehmenden Anzahl von Mensch Roboter-Kollaborationen, gerecht werden. Die Virtual Reality (VR)-Technik bietet im Rahmen der Arbeitsplatzgestaltung neue Möglichkeiten, diesen veränderten Planungsherausforderungen gerecht zu werden. Die Ausarbeitung stellt eine Methode zur Bewertung des sinnvollen Einsatzes der VR-Technik für einen spezifischen Arbeitsplatz vor. Außerdem wird aufgezeigt, wie die VR-Technik in den Prozess der Arbeitsplatzgestaltung integriert werden kann.
Development of an easy teaching and simulation solution for an autonomous mobile robot system
(2019)
With mass customized production becoming the mainstream, industries are shifting from large-scale manufacturing to flexible and customized production of small batch sizes. Agile manufacturing strategies adopted by SMEs are driving the usage of collaborative robots in today's factories. Major challenges in the adoption of cobots in the industry are the lack of a highly trained workforce to program the robot to perform complex tasks and integration of robot systems to other smart devices in the factory. In addition, the teaching and simulation by non-robotics experts of many industrial collaborative robot systems like the KUKA LBR iiwa is a major challenge, since these systems are designed to be programmed by robot experts and not by shop floor workers or other non-experts. This paper describes the research and development activities done for reducing the barriers in operation and ensure holistic integration of LBR iiwa cobot in the assembly on the example of the ESB Logistics Learning Factory. These include a visual programming solution for the easy teaching of various tasks. Robotic tasts are classified based on common robotics applications and application-specific blocks abstracting specific actions are implemented. A factory worker with no programming competency cour create robot programs by combining these blocks using a Graphical User Interface. In addition, a simulation solution was developed to visualized, analyse, and optimize robotic workflow before deployment. an autonomous mobile robot is integrated with the LBR iiw to improve reconfigurability and thus also the productivity. The system as a whole is controlled using an event-driven distributed control system. Finally, the capabilities of the system are analysed based on the design principles of Industrie 4.0 and potential future research ideas are discussed to further improve the system.
The fifth mobile communications generation (5G) offers the deployment scenario of licensed 5G standalone non-public networks (NPNs). Standalone NPNs are locally restricted 5G networks based on 5G New Radio technology which are fully isolated from public networks. NPNs operate on their dedicated core network and offer organizations high data security and customizability for intrinsic network control. Especially in networked and cloud manufacturing, 5G is seen as a promising enabler for delay-sensitive applications such as autonomous mobile robots and robot motion control based on the tactile internet that requires wireless communication with deterministic traffic and strict cycling times. However, currently available industrial standalone NPNs do not meet the performance parameters defined in the 5G specification and standardization process. Current research lacks in performance measurements of download, upload, and time delays of 5G standalone-capable end-devices in NPNs with currently available software and hardware in industrial settings. Therefore, this paper presents initial measurements of the data rate and the round-trip delay in standalone NPNs with various end-devices to generate a first performance benchmark for 5G-based applications. In addition, five end-devices are compared to gain insights into the performance of currently available standalone-capable 5G chipsets. To validate the data rate, three locally hosted measurement methods, namely iPerf3, LibreSpeed and OpenSpeedTest, are used. Locally hosted Ping and LibreSpeed have been executed to validate the time delay. The 5G standalone NPN of Reutlingen University uses licensed frequencies between 3.7-3.8 GHz and serves as the testbed for this study.
5G-Campusnetze sind vielversprechende Umgebungen für industrielle Anwendungen in Produktion und Intralogistik. Diese erreichen jedoch bisher nicht die versprochenen Leistungen, um intralogistischen Anwendungen das volle Potenzial von 5G bieten zu können. Die im Rahmen des Projekts 5G4KMU erhobenen und in diesem Beitrag vorgestellten Leistungsmessungen dienen zur Evaluierung der derzeitigen Praxistauglichkeit von 5G-Campusnetzen.
Mobile Roboter sind entscheidend für die automatisierte Intralogistik der Industrie 4.0. Eine sichere drahtlose Anbindung an Flottenmanager oder Steuerungssysteme ist essenziell. Private 5G-Campusnetzwerke mit lizenzierten Frequenzen gelten als vielversprechende Lösung. Aus diesem Grund beleuchtet der Beitrag die Grundlagen der 5G-Technologie für mobile Roboter sowie die aktuelle Leistungsfähigkeit von privaten 5G-Campusnetzwerken anhand erhobener Messungen.
The fifth generation of mobile communication (5G) is a wireless technology developed to provide reliable, fast data transmission for industrial applications, such as autonomous mobile robots and connect cyber-physical systems using Internet of Things (IoT) sensors. In this context, private 5G networks enable the full performance of industrial applications built on dedicated 5G infrastructures. However, emerging wireless communication technologies such as 5G are a complex and challenging topic for training in learning factories, often lacking physical or visual interaction. Therefore, this paper aims to develop a real-time performance monitoring system of private 5G networks and different industrial 5G devices to visualise the performance and impact factors influencing 5G for students and future connectivity experts. Additionally, this paper presents the first long-term measurements of private 5G networks and shows the performance gap between the actual and targeted performance of private 5G networks.