Title: Flexible Material Handling
1Flexible Material Handling Past, Present, and
Future
Professor Steve Derby MANE Department October 18,
2006
2Professor Steve Derby
- Designed automation work cells and conducted
related research for over 35 companies - 8 US patents in automation and mechanisms
- Authored Design of Automatic Machinery
- 6 years work in Fuel Cell MEA process design
- 4 years work BL soft contact lens inspection
- Started 2 robotic automation companies
3Flexible Material Handling
- RPI team has had many projects in past 25 years
with material handling of flexible objects - Fabrics
- Hydrated contact lenses
- Springs
- Surgical robotics
- Fuel Cell Electrodes Membranes
4Flexible Material Handling - Fabric
- RPI team developed a machine to make custom
shaped swimming pool covers consisting of many
panels - CAD/CAM process
- PC based controls
- Large (9 ft x 75 ft) gantry robot
- Unrolled fabric (woven polypropylene)
- Sensed and compensated for fabric defects
- Marked with 2 colored inks (cut lines, sew lines,
alignment fiducials) - Rolled up for cutting process
5Flexible Material Handling - Fabric
6Flexible Material Handling - Fabric
- RPI team created a robotic workcell to press
mens dress trousers (during manufacture) for
Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) - First tried to duplicate humans
- Sense wrinkles then smooth out
- Finally gripped with 4 grippers - easier
7 Flexible Material Handling - Fabric
8Flexible Material Handling - Fabric
- RPI team developed system for digital printing of
textiles for sampling and small lots of custom
designed fabric - Developed unique CMYK color set jetable textile
fiber reactive dyes - Material handling (zero tension) of fabric
- Designed and built our own custom ink jet print
heads with active redundancy, including sensing
of condition of each individual orifice
(thousands), and automated error recovery - Created custom raster image processing (RPI)
- Built working Proof of Principle Model
9Flexible Material Handling - Springs
- RPI team created automation to handle springs for
- Kodak one time use camera assembly
- Texas Instruments sensor assembly
- Standard Gage (Brown Sharpe) dial indicator
assembly
10Flexible Material Handling - Membranes
RPI team developed robotic end effector to handle
fuel cell membrane
11Flexible Material Handling - Membranes
Vacuum alone not sufficient Spatula used to break
surface tension
12Flexible Material Handling - Membranes
13Stack Assembly Material Handling
- Automation is needed to handle (load/unload,
transport, manipulate, align, assemble) stack
components - Bipolar plates, end plates
- Cell seals
- Electrodes
- MEAs
- Electrodes and MEAs are not rigid
14Stack Assembly Research Challenges
- Validation of incoming components and materials
- Robust and efficient handling of fragile flexible
materials - Custom fixturing and end-of-arm tooling
- Vision guided precision placement
- Vision/sensing/tension control to avoid wrinkles
- Assembly with tight geometric and force tolerance
(Incremental stack performance / leak test?) - Design for manufacture assembly
15Stack Assembly Material Handling
- Automation cannot simply duplicate present day
human assembly techniques and rely on post
assembly testing - Research needs to be conducted to develop better
methods with integrated modeling, design,
sensing, control - Research will likely produce suggested stack
component design rules
16Stack Assembly Material Handling
- Lab demo shows early work to date
- Consortium needed to increase dialog exchange
with fuel cell component suppliers, fuel cell
manufacturers, fuel cell users, fuel cell
researchers to accelerate progress - No commercially viable product without automated
assembly !!