Abstract

Many industrial sectors face increasing production demands and the need to reduce costs, without compromising the quality. The use of robotics and automation has grown significantly in recent years, but versatile robotic manipulators are still not commonly used in small factories. Beside of the investments required to enable efficient and profitable use of robot technology, the efforts needed to program robots are only economically viable in case of large lot sizes. Generating robot programs for specific manufacturing tasks still relies on programming trajectory waypoints by hand. The use of virtual simulation software and the availability of the specimen digital models can facilitate robot programming. Nevertheless, in many cases, the virtual models are not available or there are excessive differences between virtual and real setups, leading to inaccurate robot programs and time-consuming manual corrections. Previous works have demonstrated the use of robot-manipulated optical sensors to map the geometry of samples. However, the use of simple user-defined robot paths, which are not optimized for a specific part geometry, typically causes some areas of the samples to not be mapped with the required level of accuracy or to not be sampled at all by the optical sensor. This work presents an autonomous framework to enable adaptive surface mapping, without any previous knowledge of the part geometry being transferred to the system. The novelty of this work lies in enabling the capability of mapping a part surface at the required level of sampling density, whilst minimizing the number of necessary view poses. Its development has also led to an efficient method of point cloud down-sampling and merging. The article gives an overview of the related work in the field, a detailed description of the proposed framework and a proof of its functionality through both simulated and experimental evidences.

Highlights

  • 1.1 MotivationThis work is motivated by the need to develop an effective approach to measure the geometry of workpieces

  • In order to validate the framework in experimental scenarios, the control computer has been interfaced with a robot arm and a low-cost RGB-D camera to reconstruct the geometry of a 3D printed version of

  • When the scanning sensor is manipulated by a robotic arm, it is necessary to consider the robot kinematic constraints and avoid collisions

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Summary

Motivation

This work is motivated by the need to develop an effective approach to measure the geometry of workpieces. The use of robotics has increasingly penetrated the manufacturing and the construction industries [1,2,3]. Besides being attractive to make production phases more cost-effective, robotics and automation have been used

Related work
Article structure
Theoretical foundations
Definition of metrics
Incremental down-sampling and merging
Next best view pose computation
Objective function definition
Searching through the multi-dimensional space
Stopping criteria
Experimental setup
Simulations
Sensor data results
Findings
Conclusions and future work

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