Company Logo

Collision avoidance technology makes cobots even more productive

24th November 2020

SPS Connect 2020, 24 – 26th November 2020

Collaborative robot installations are repeatable, reliable and provide an environment where humans and robots can work together side by side. Certainly this has given many users a solution for increasing productivity, but in some cases there are limits to what can be achieved in terms of the flexibility and sophistication of the application. However, the latest developments in collaborative robots and their control technologies look set to change that, defining a new paradigm for speed and flexibility in cobot workspaces.

Oliver Giertz, Product Manager for Servo/Motion and Robotics at Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V, Factory Automation EMEA, examines the strategies that can enable cobots to operate safely and efficiently with humans in unstructured and dynamic environments.

With cobots programmed to follow pre-defined motions and actions, the automation solution is reliable and repeatable, but it is not flexible. True flexibility comes from the ability to have robots which, rather than following pre-defined paths, can instead make motion decisions for themselves, intelligently selecting from multiple options. The result would be cobot workspaces that are not only repeatable, but also flexible and optimised.

However, just setting up pre-defined motion paths can imply significant programming effort, plus the associated simulation, testing and evaluation. When we talk about ultimate flexibility, what we want is not pre-defined motion paths, but rather dynamically defined motion paths. Creating a collision-free environment with conventional technologies would require a gargantuan feat of programming.

Eliminating the potential of collisions

The solution lies within some of the same technologies that are being used in industrial robot cells. These technologies can deliver increased speed and flexibility to cobot working environments. In particular, Mitsubishi Electric and Realtime Robotics have worked together to simplify and accelerate robotic automation in unstructured and dynamic environments.

The custom solution combines Mitsubishi Electric’s collaborative robots with the control and programming technologies of Realtime Robotics. It is built around the Realtime motion planning accelerator hardware and RapidPlan Create software . RapidPlan removes the need for manual motion planning and eliminates robot interlocking, significantly reducing deployment time and cost for multi-robot cells. The specialised software enables robots to evaluate millions of alternative motion paths to avoid a collision and choose the optimal route before making a move – all in milliseconds.

This can provide a complete solution in a structured environment where there is no requirement to account for unplanned obstacles. But in a collaborative robot setting, the human operator is an unknown variable that needs to be accounted for. Here, installations can make use of Realtime Robotics’ RapidSense technology, which extends the functionality of RapidPlan by using up to 8 3D cameras to create a merged point cloud. During run-time, it perceives unknown objects and generates paths to avoid any contact.

Using RapidPlan and RapidSense in a cobot environment, users can reap the benefits of optimised work cells. The technology removes the need for PLC interlocks, and should one cobot in the cell be required to shut down for maintenance, there can be immediate, automated adjustment of the other cobots to minimise or prevent unscheduled cell downtime. Importantly, all of this comes with simplified set-up, with Mitsubishi Electric and Realtime Robotics able to demonstrate up to a 10x reduction in initial programming and implementation time.

Multi-robot work cells

Further, the partnership between Mitsubishi Electric and Realtime Robotics paves the way for multi-robot work cells that combine both industrial robots and purpose-designed collaborative robots to work alongside people. It builds on the existing initiative between the two companies to enable robots to work together in environments where there might be unplanned obstacles, with the robots dynamically planning around the obstacles in their workspace.

Bringing these new technologies to collaborative installations will deliver enhanced precision, speed and payload capabilities. The new solution holds the key to unlocking the productivity promise of cobot installations that has for so long seemed tantalisingly close and yet somehow just out of reach.

 

Image 1: Oliver Giertz, Product Manager for Servo/Motion and robotics for the EMEA region at Mitsubishi Electric. [Source: Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V.]

Image 2: Mitsubishi Electric industrial robots with Realtime Robotics’ technology embedded can work safely and collision-free in an unstructured and dynamic environment. [Source: Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V.]

Image 3: The partnership between Mitsubishi Electric and Realtime Robotics paves the way for multi-robot work cells that combine both industrial robots and purpose-designed collaborative robots to work alongside people. [Source: Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V.]


About Mitsubishi Electric

With more than 100 years of experience in providing reliable, high-quality products, Mitsubishi Electric Corporation (TOKYO: 6503) is a recognized world leader in the manufacture, marketing and sales of electrical and electronic equipment used in information processing and communications, space development and satellite communications, consumer electronics, industrial technology, energy, transportation and building equipment. Mitsubishi Electric enriches society with technology in the spirit of its “Changes for the Better.” The company recorded a revenue of 4,476.7 billion yen (U.S.$ 36.7 billion*) in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2022.Mitsubishi Electric Europe, Industrial Automation – UK Branch is located in Hatfield, United Kingdom. It is a part of the European Factory Automation Business Group based in Ratingen, Germany which in turn is part of Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V., a wholly owned subsidiary of Mitsubishi Electric Corporation, Japan.The role of Industrial Automation – UK Branch is to manage sales, service and support across its network of local branches and distributors throughout the United Kingdom.

*U.S. dollar amounts are translated from yen at the rate of ¥221=U.S.$1, the approximate rate on the Tokyo Foreign Exchange Market on March 31, 2022.

Further Information:
Website: gb.mitsubishielectric.com/fa
Email: automation@meuk.mee.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/MEUKAutomation
Twitter: twitter.com/MEUKAutomation
YouTube: www.youtube.com/user/MitsubishiFAEU
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com Mitsubishi Electric – Automation Systems UK


Editorial Contact: Brittany Kennan
Tel: +44 (0)1905 917477
Web: news.dmaeuropa.com
Email: press-team@dmaeuropa.com
Address: Progress House, Midland Road, Worcester, Worcestershire, WR5 1AQ, United Kingdom

Reader Contact:
Mitsubishi Electric EU: Monika Torkel
Tel: +44 (0) 2102 486 2150
Web: https://emea.mitsubishielectric.com/fa
Email: automation@meuk.mee.com
Address: Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V. German Branch, Mitsubishi-Electric-Platz 1, 40882, Ratingen, Germany