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Industrial Robot Programming and UPnP Services Orchestration for the Automation of Factories
Author(s) -
A. Valera,
Javier Gomez-Moreno,
Antonio-José Sánchez-Salmerón,
Carlos Ricolfe-Viala,
R. Zotovic,
M. Vallés
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
international journal of advanced robotic systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.394
H-Index - 46
eISSN - 1729-8814
pISSN - 1729-8806
DOI - 10.5772/51373
Subject(s) - computer science , orchestration , workflow , automation , embedded system , robotics , industrial robot , robot , programming by demonstration , interfacing , system integration , universal plug and play , teleoperation , distributed computing , software engineering , artificial intelligence , computer hardware , operating system , computer network , engineering , database , mechanical engineering , art , musical , visual arts
The integration of equipment and other devices built into industrial robot cells with modern Ethernet interface technologies and low-cost mass produced devices (such as vision systems, laser scanners, force torque-sensors, PLCs and PDAs etc.) enables integrators to offer more powerful and smarter solutions. Nevertheless, the programming of all these devices efficiently requires very specific knowledge about them, such as their hardware architectures and specific programming languages as well as details about the system's low level communication protocols. To address these issues, this paper describes and analyses the Plug-and-Play architecture. This is one of the most interesting service-oriented architectures (SOAs) available, which exhibits characteristics that are well adapted to industrial robotics cells. To validate their programming features and applicability, a test bed was specially designed. This provides a new graphical service orchestration which was implemented using Workflow Foundation 4 of .NET. The obtained results allowed us to verify that the use of integration schemes based on SOAs reduces the system integration time and is better adapted to industrial robotic cell system integrators

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