This paper deals with the use of an industrial robot (IR) for the deburring of hard material items (i.e. cast iron items). The control strategies introduced in this paper aim to mimic the human behaviour during the manual deburring. On the basis of force feedback, provided from a 1-axis load cell, the nominal deburring trajectory is optimised and deformed making multiple repetitions. The deburring trajectory is repeated until completing the nominal deburring path. The removal of thin layers of materials allows the robot to operate at high feed rates avoiding spindle stall and without exciting elastics effects on the mechanical structure of the system. Furthermore, a method to automatically detect the force changepoints, related to the presence of a burr, without tuning force thresholds, is discussed. The human mimicking control strategy is compared with a standard industrial approach demonstrating a reduction of the task cycle time and an improvement of the finishing quality.

A human mimicking control strategy for robotic deburring of hard materials

Villagrossi, Enrico
Primo
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Pedrocchi, Nicola
Secondo
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Beschi, Manuel
Penultimo
Membro del Collaboration Group
;
Molinari Tosatti, Lorenzo
Ultimo
Funding Acquisition
2018

Abstract

This paper deals with the use of an industrial robot (IR) for the deburring of hard material items (i.e. cast iron items). The control strategies introduced in this paper aim to mimic the human behaviour during the manual deburring. On the basis of force feedback, provided from a 1-axis load cell, the nominal deburring trajectory is optimised and deformed making multiple repetitions. The deburring trajectory is repeated until completing the nominal deburring path. The removal of thin layers of materials allows the robot to operate at high feed rates avoiding spindle stall and without exciting elastics effects on the mechanical structure of the system. Furthermore, a method to automatically detect the force changepoints, related to the presence of a burr, without tuning force thresholds, is discussed. The human mimicking control strategy is compared with a standard industrial approach demonstrating a reduction of the task cycle time and an improvement of the finishing quality.
2018
Istituto di Sistemi e Tecnologie Industriali Intelligenti per il Manifatturiero Avanzato - STIIMA (ex ITIA)
robotics
machining
control
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/345739
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