4 research outputs found

    Dynamic Analysis of a 165Kg Spot Welding Robot

    Full text link

    Analysis of the Compliance Properties of an Industrial Robot with the Mozzi Axis Approach

    Get PDF
    In robotic processes, the compliance of the robot arm plays a very important role. In some conditions, for example, in robotic assembly, robot arm compliance can compensate for small position and orientation errors of the end-effector. In other processes, like machining, robot compliance may generate chatter vibrations with an impairment in the quality of the machined surface. In industrial robots, the compliance of the end-effector is chiefly due to joint compliances. In this paper, joint compliances of a serial six-joint industrial robot are identified with a novel modal method making use of specific modes of vibration dominated by the compliance of only one joint. Then, in order to represent the effect of the identified compliances on robot performance in an intuitive and geometric way, a novel kinematic method based on the concept of \u201cMozzi axis\u201d of the end-effector is presented and discusse

    Posture Dependent Vibration Resistance of Serial Robot Manipulators to Applied Oscillating Loads

    Get PDF
    There are several advantages to replacing CNC machinery with robotic machine tools and as such robotic machining is emerging into the manufacturing and metal cutting industry. There remain several disadvantages to using robots over CNC stations primarily due to flexibility in robotic manipulators, which severely reduces accuracy when operating under high machining forces. This flexibility is dependent on configuration and thus the configuration can be optimised through posture selection to minimise deflection. In previous work little has been done to account for operating frequency and the additional complications that can arise from frequency dependent responses of robotic machine tools. A Fanuc S-360 manipulator was used to experimentally investigate the benefits of including frequency compensation in posture selection. The robot dynamics first had to be identified and experimental modal analysis was selected due the inherent dependency on frequency characteristics. Specifically, a circle fit operation identified modal parameters and a least squares optimisation generated dynamic parameters for a spatial model. A rigid-link flexible-joint model was selected and a pseudo-joint was used to create an additional DOF to accommodate link flexibility. Posture optimisation was performed using a gradient-descent algorithm that used several starting points to identify a global minimum. The results showed that a subset of modal data that excluded the mode shape vectors could be used to create a model to predict the manipulator vibration response. It was also found that the receptance variation of the manipulator with configuration was insufficient to verify the optimisation throughout the entire selected workspace; however the model was shown to be useful in regions containing multiple peaks where the modelled dynamics were dominant over the highly volatile measured data. Simulations were performed on a redundant planar manipulator to overcome the lack of receptance variation found in the Fanuc manipulator. These simulations showed that there were two mechanisms driving the optimisation; overall amplitude reduction and frequency specific amplitude reduction. Using a stiffness posture measure for comparison, the results of the frequency specific reduction could be separated and were found to be particularly beneficial when operating close to resonant frequencies
    corecore