Title: Robotics Bertain http:www.engineeringed.org
1RoboticsBertainhttp//www.engineering-ed.org/
- 1920 The idea of a robot is not new. For
thousands of years man has been imagining
intelligent mechanized devices that perform
human-like tasks. He has built automatic toys and
mechanisms and imagined robots in drawings,
books, plays and science fiction movies.
2Robotics History
What is the definition of a 'robot'?
"A reprogrammable, multifunctional manipulator
designed to move material, parts, tools, or
specialized devices through various programmed
motions for the performance of a variety of
tasks" Robot Institute of America, 1979
Where did the word 'robot' come from?
- In fact, the term "robot" was first used in
1920 in a play called "R.U.R." Or "Rossum's
universal robots" by the Czech writer Karel
Capek. The plot was simple man makes robot then
robot kills man! Many movies that followed
continued to show robots as harmful, menacing
machines.
3Robotics Terminology
- The term 'robotics' refers to the study and
use of robots. The term was coined and first used
by the Russian-born American scientist and writer
Isaac Asimov (born Jan. 2, 1920, died Apr. 6,
1992). Asimov wrote prodigiously on a wide
variety of subjects. He was best known for his
many works of science fiction.
- The most famous include I Robot (1950),
- He also wrote the three Laws of Robotics for
which he is also famous.
4- More recent movies, however, like the 1977
"star wars", portray robots such as "C3PO" and
"R2D2" as man's helpers. "Number five" in the
movie "short circuit" and C3PO actually take on a
human appearance. These robots, - which are made to look.
- human are called "androids".
5- However, robots of today are not exactly the
walking, talking intelligent machines of of
movies, stories and our dreams. Today, we find
most robots working for people in factories,
warehouses, and laboratories. In the future,
robots may show up in other places our schools,
our homes, even our bodies.
6- Robots have the potential to change our
economy, our health, our standard of living, our
knowledge and the world in which we live. As the
technology progresses, we are finding new ways to
use robots.
Each new use brings new hope and possibilities,
but also potential dangers and risks.
7Benefits of Robots
- Robots offer specific benefits to workers,
industries and countries. If introduced
correctly, industrial robots can improve the
quality of life by freeing workers from dirty,
boring, dangerous and heavy labor.
8- Robotics for bio-production
- Many robots for bio-production have been
developed in the world and it is predicted that
they will be commercialized in the 21st century,
since some of them were already commercialized by
some companies in Japan and European countries. A
tomato and cherry tomato harvesting robot, a
cucumber harvesting robot, strawberry harvesting
robots, a multi-operation robot to work in
grapevine yard, and a chrysanthemum cutting
sticking robot.
9EMT
- HAZBOT III is part of JPL's Emergency
Response Robotics Project, a five-year effort
begun in 1991 to apply robotics technology to the
safe handling of hazardous materials. Robots such
as HAZBOT also hold potential for use in mining
and law enforcement. "It's almost standard now to
have robots on bomb squads in major cities, but
it took several years for the idea to catch on,"
said Richard Welch, task manager of Emergency
Response Robotics at JPL.
10Robotics History
And Future
- Future missions to space will include many
robotic vehicles designed to perform specific
tasks both autonomous and remote controlled.
11- The Mars 2003 Rover Project is designed to have
two scientific rovers going to Mars in 2003. Each
rover will search for evidence of liquid water
that may have been present in Mars past. The
rovers will be identical to each other, but will
land at different regions of Mars.
12Robot Components
Parts of a robot
- Robots use arms, end effectors (grippers),
drive mechanisms, sensors, controllers, gears and
motors to perform the human-like functions
necessary to perform their jobs
13Robot Components
arms
- Robot arms come in all shapes and sizes. The
arm is the part of the robot that positions the
end-effector and sensors to do their
pre-programmed business.
- Many (but not all) resemble human arms, and have
shoulders, elbows, wrists, even fingers. This
gives the robot a lot of ways to position itself
in its environment. Each joint is said to give
the robot 1 degree of freedom.
- See http//www.paly.net/dbertain/robotics/robo/gr
iponrobotics/index.html
14Robot Components
Degrees of freedom
So, a simple robot arm with 3 degrees of freedom
could move in 3 ways up and down, left and
right, forward and backward. Most working robots
today have 6 degrees of freedom.
Humans have many more and some robots have 8, 12,
or even 20 degrees of freedom, but these 6 are
enough for most basic tasks. As a result, most
jointed-arm robots in use today have 6 degrees of
freedom
15Robot Components
AXIS OF ROTATION
- X, Y, Z, Tilt and Spin
- Are 3 of the degrees of freedom that robots
perform. Most arms move according to Cartesian
coordinates
16Robot Components
tilt
- Tilt is the angle between gripper and
Z-Axis.The animation sequence shows the three
most important tilting angles 45, 0, and -45 and
how tilting enables to tip over a block.
17Robot Components
spin
- Spin is defined as the gripper's rotation
around the Z-Axis. You need to choose a spin
value to align the jaws of the gripper with a
block. Spin 0 aligns the block with the Y-Axis,
Spin -45 with the diagonal between Y- and X-Axis.
18Robotics Sensors Controllers
What are sensors?
- Sensors collect all the information a robot needs
to operate and interact with its environment.
What are Controllers?
Controllers interpret all the input from the
sensors and decide how to act in response.
19Robotics Sensors Controllers
What are sensors for?
The control of a manipulator or industrial robot
is based on the correct interpretation of sensory
information. This information can be obtained
either internally to the robot (for example,
joint positions and motor torque) or externally
using a wide range of sensors.
20Robotics Sensors Controllers
Types of Sensors
- Since sensors are any device that provide
input of data to the robot controller a wide
verity of sensors exist. Some basic types of
sensors are shown including - Light sensors which measure light intensity.
- Heat Sensors which measure temperature.
- Touch sensors which tell the robot when it bumps
into something. - Ultra Sonic Rangers which tell the robot how far
away objects are. - And gyroscopes which tell the robot which
direction is up.
21Robotics Sensors controllers
- The bumper skirt on this robot is an example of a
touch sensor. When the robot runs into a wall the
bumper skirt hits a micro switch which lets the
robot controller know that the robot is up
against a wall. Other types of touch sensors are
used internally to let the robot know when an arm
is extended to far and it should be retracted or
when the robots other physical limits are
reached.
22Robotics Sensors controllers
- Light sensors are used to detect the presence
and Intensity of light. These can be used to make
a light seeking robot and are often used to
simulate insect intelligence in robots.
23Robotics Sensors controllers
- Heat sensors help robots determine if they are
in danger of overheating. These sensors are often
used internally to make sure that the robots
electronics do not breakdown.
24Robotics Sensors controllers
- Ultra Sonic Rangers are used to determine how
far a robot is away from an object. They are
often used by robots that need to navigate
complicated terrain and cannot risk bumping into
anything.
25Robotics Sensors controllers
- Gyroscopes are used in robots that need to
maintain balance or are not inherently stable.
Gyroscopes are often coupled with powerful robot
controllers that have the processing power
necessary calculate thousands of physical
simulations per second.
26Robotics Sensors controllers
- Use transistors as a switch to control power
to motors, relays and lamps. Current and power
handling capability is pretty much dictated by
package size. The bigger the package, the more
power.
27Robotics Sensors controllers
Controllers
- Basic Stamp IIThe Basic Stamp II is a small,
self-contained computer controller manufactured
by Parallax Inc. This easy-to-use system is
programmed using a Basic-like language called
PBasic. Programs are written on an IBM-style PC
then downloaded to the Basic Stamp II for
execution. Large libraries of programs can be
created and saved.
28Robotics Sensors controllers
Controls
- Tiny custom microchips like these give
"vision" to a toy car by processing images and
telling the vehicle how to respond.
29Examples
- Tiny-phoon
- www.tinyphoon.com
- Video