Title :
Automated generation of weld path trajectories
Author :
Ames, Arlo L. ; Hinman-Sweeney, Elaine M. ; Sizemore, John M.
Author_Institution :
Sandia Nat. Labs., Albuquerque, NM
Abstract :
AUTOGEN is software that automates the planning and compiling of control programs for robotic welding of ship structure. It works by evaluating computer representations of the ship design and the manufacturing plan, identifying and characterizing each weld, constructing the robot motions necessary to accomplish the welds, and determining the correct assignment of process control values. AUTOGEN generates robot control programs automatically, without manual intervention. Most ship structure assemblies are unique or at best manufactured only a few times. Accordingly, the high cost inherent in all previous methods of preparing complex control programs has made robot welding of ship structures economically unattractive to the United States shipbuilding industry. AUTOGEN eliminates the cost of creating robot control programs. With programming costs eliminated, capitalization of robots to weld ship structure becomes economically viable. Robot welding of ship structures result in reduced ship costs, uniform product quality and enhanced worker safety Sandia National Laboratories and Northrop Grumman Ship Systems worked with the National Shipbuilding Research Program to develop a means of automated path and process generation for robotic welding. This effort resulted In the AUTOGEN program, which has successfully demonstrated automated path generation and robot control. Although the current implementation of AUTOGEN is optimized for welding applications, the path and process planning capability has applicability to a number of industrial applications, including painting, riveting, and adhesive delivery
Keywords :
control engineering computing; design; occupational safety; path planning; process control; process planning; production planning; robotic welding; shipbuilding industry; welds; AUTOGEN; National Shipbuilding Research Program; Northrop Grumman Ship Systems; Sandia National Laboratories; United States shipbuilding industry; adhesive delivery; automated path generation; automated process generation; control program compiling; control program planning; enhanced worker safety; manufacturing plan; painting; path planning; process control values; process planning; riveting; robot control programs; robot motions; robotic welding; ship design; ship structure; ship structure assemblies; uniform product quality; weld path trajectories; welds; Automatic control; Computer aided manufacturing; Costs; Manufacturing processes; Marine vehicles; Motion planning; Robot control; Robotics and automation; Service robots; Welding;
Conference_Titel :
Assembly and Task Planning: From Nano to Macro Assembly and Manufacturing, 2005. (ISATP 2005). The 6th IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Montreal, Que.
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9080-6
DOI :
10.1109/ISATP.2005.1511470