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Towards Flexibility in Future Industrial Manufacturing: A Global Framework for Self-organization of Production Cells
Author(s) -
Selma Azaiez,
Michael Boc,
Loïc Cudennec,
Max Da Silva Simoes,
Jens Haupert,
Selma Kchir,
Xenia Klinge,
Wael Labidi,
Karima Nahhal,
Julius Pfrommer,
Miriam Schleipen,
Christian Schulz,
Thibaud Tortech
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
procedia computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.334
H-Index - 76
ISSN - 1877-0509
DOI - 10.1016/j.procs.2016.04.264
Subject(s) - computer science , control reconfiguration , orchestration , flexibility (engineering) , context (archaeology) , distributed computing , service (business) , production (economics) , embedded system , art , musical , paleontology , statistics , mathematics , economy , macroeconomics , economics , visual arts , biology
The future of manufacturing leads to flexible industrial facilities in which production lines or systems are composed by several production cells. Production cells can be reorganized and reconfigured by introducing new devices, equipment, functionalities or even by re-configuring the communication network. In this context, machine-to-machine communication does not only provide a transport layer for monitoring and control, but also provide a high-level distributed service framework and data management system. In this contribution, the authors address the challenge to manage the self-organization of production cells by means of a global framework. This framework bases on the following technologies: RobotML for the scenario description, OPC UA for service orchestration, object memories for distributed data sharing, Frama-C/Para-C for code verification and SDN for network reconfiguration. This framework has been deployed within a use case involving the SYBOT collaborative robot and a reconfigurable Raspberry-Pi based camera to enhance human operator safety. Experiments show that from a high-level description of the scenario, it was possible to automatically orchestrate at the OPC UA level the different reconfigurations of the production cell

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