Title :
Deadlock Resolution in Automated Manufacturing Systems With Robots
Author :
Wu, NaiQi ; Zhou, MengChu
Author_Institution :
Guangdong Univ. of Technol., Guangzhou
fDate :
7/1/2007 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
An automated manufacturing system (AMS) contains a number of versatile machines (or workstations), buffers, and an automated material handling system (MHS). The MHS can be an automated guide vehicle (AGV) system, and/or a system that consists of multiple robots. Deadlock resolution in AMS is an important issue. For the AMS with an AGV system as MHS, the problems of deadlock resolution for part processing process and AGV system as an integrated system has been studied. It is shown that AGVs can serve as both material handling devices and central buffers at the same time to help resolve deadlocks. For AMS with robots as MHS, the existing work treated the robots just as material handling devices and showed that the robots had contribution to deadlock. In this paper, such AMS is modeled by resource-oriented Petri nets. Contrary to the existing work, it is shown that the robots have no contribution to deadlock by adopting such nets to control AMS. More interestingly, they can be used to resolve deadlock by serving as temporary part storage devices. A new deadlock control policy is proposed by treating robots as both material handling devices and buffers. The new policy outperforms the existing ones.
Keywords :
Petri nets; automatic guided vehicles; industrial robots; manufacturing systems; materials handling; automated guide vehicle; automated manufacturing systems; automated material handling system; deadlock resolution; resource-oriented Petri nets; robots; versatile machines; Automatic control; Manufacturing automation; Manufacturing systems; Materials handling; Petri nets; Robotics and automation; Robots; System recovery; Vehicles; Workstations; Automated manufacturing systems (AMS); Petri net; deadlock avoidance; modeling and control;
Journal_Title :
Automation Science and Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASE.2006.888049