Abstract

In recent years, collaborative robots have been introduced into production systems as a new generation of industrial robots, sharing work with workers. Unlike industrial robots and workers in the past to work in isolation, collaborative robots and workers can often share work tasks and space. The introduction of these collaborative robots makes human-robot collaboration (HRC) more and more important, which is an emerging technology in the field of production systems. According to the characteristics of workers and collaborative robots, a measurement model of assembly complexity is first proposed. The assembly tasks are analyzed from the three aspects of process depth, operation process, and cognitive process, and the complexity of each assembly task is evaluated. The indicator of the machine-machine collaboration attribute measures each task to determine whether the task can be completed by a collaborative robot; finally, an assembly task allocation evaluation model is established, to ensure the assembly complexity of each worker’s task is balanced, so that the cognitive load assigned to the robot task is lower than the worker’s task, to maximize production efficiency and reduce the assembly system cost.

Full Text
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