DocumentCode
3580116
Title
Task oriented area partitioning and allocation for optimal operation of multiple industrial robots in unstructured environments
Author
Hassan, Mahdi ; Dikai Liu ; Shoudong Huang ; Dissanayake, Gamini
Author_Institution
Centre for Autonomous Syst., Univ. of Technol., Sydney, NSW, Australia
fYear
2014
Firstpage
1184
Lastpage
1189
Abstract
When multiple industrial robots are deployed in field applications such as grit blasting and spray painting of steel bridges, the environments are unstructured for robot operation and the robot positions may not be arranged accurately. Coordination of these multiple robots to maximize productivity through area partitioning and allocation is crucial. This paper presents a novel approach to area partitioning and allocation by utilizing multiobjective optimization and voronoi partitioning. Multiobjective optimization is used to minimize: (1) completion time, (2) proximity of the allocated area to the robot, and (3) the torque experienced by each joint of the robot during task execution. Seed points of the voronoi graph for voronoi partitioning are designed to be the design variables of the multiobjective optimization algorithm. Results of three different simulation scenarios are presented to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach and the advantage of incorporating robots´ torque capacity.
Keywords
bridges (structures); computational geometry; graph theory; industrial manipulators; multi-robot systems; optimisation; painting; position control; productivity; spray coating techniques; Voronoi partitioning; area allocation; completion time minimization; design variables; field applications; grit blasting; multiobjective optimization algorithm; multiple industrial robots; multiple robot coordination; optimal operation; productivity maximize; proximity minimization; robot joint torque minimization; robot operation; robot position; robot torque capacity; seed points; spray painting; steel bridges; task execution; task oriented area partitioning; unstructured environments; voronoi graph; Collision avoidance; Joints; Resource management; Robot kinematics; Service robots; Torque; area partition; complete coverage; multiple robot arms; task allocation; workspace division;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Control Automation Robotics & Vision (ICARCV), 2014 13th International Conference on
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICARCV.2014.7064473
Filename
7064473
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