[Lab Bench]
Know Your Limitations Before Designing Your Next Robot
William Wong
ED Online ID #18835
May 22, 2008
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
Reprints
Nuance was the name of the
game at last month’s Robo-
Business show in Pittsburgh.
This year, the aisles were populated
not just by people and remote-control
robots but also by a few autonomous robots—
and some of these robots weren’t research projects
but platforms that were for sale.
During one of the last tech sessions of the
show, CCS Robotics chief technical officer
Anthony Diodato described the company’s
SpeciMinder robots and how they have operated
in hospitals for the past couple of years
with 98% availability. Not only that, the robots
have been operating autonomously.
SpeciMinders are gophers, with specific
locations where they stop to pick up medical
materials (see the figure). Users place items
such as specimen samples and medication on
the robot and press a destination button. The robot then winds
its way to the destination, where it stops and waits for another
person to remove the desired material. On occasion, the robot
wanders back to its charging station, but it usually scurries
about doing its masters’ bidding.
Previously, members of the hospital staff would transport
such items, often taking longer because deliveries are boring,
low-priority responsibilities. Multitasking simply adds latency
to the equation. Robots improve overall efficiency, and they’re
cheaper and more effective than the usual alternative, pnuematic
tubes.
The system uses a silicon-carbide laser for tracking its position
as well as obstacles. For example, it can wait for people in
its path to move before proceeding. If an inanimate object is
blocking its path, it chooses an alternate route.
WHO NEEDS A DEGREE?
But the real story isn’t just a successful robotic
solution. CCS Robotics took an existing platform
from MobileRobots that could go from point A to
point B while avoiding obstacles without requiring
a
robotics programmer. ARCS provided most of
this support as part of the MobileRobots platform.
CCS Robotics added quite a bit, but much of
the new support was built on top of the platform.
In addition to the user interface, CCS Robotics
included a wireless system for operating the
automatic doors found around the hospitals. A
wireless interface augments those doors as well.
The bottom line is that CCS Robotics has
come up with a robust system that is very reliable
and built it without picking up a graduate
degree. Its designers used major components
instead of building everything from scratch.
Is the platform the end point of for hospital
delivery systems? No, but improvements could come from a
variety of sources. For instance, one downtime issue occurred
when a user hit the panic button to stop the robot. It only
happened occassionally and often when the robot was taking
an alternate route, though it required resetting the robot so it
knew where it was located. Adding something like Evolution
Robotics’ NorthStar location system might simplify the job or
even eliminate user intervention after the reset.
Robot platforms still have a long way to go, but the development
environment is starting to turn from research into production.
Of course, creating the entire platform within a company
is still the norm. Either way, the number of robots you
may encounter is growing steadily.
CCS ROBOTICS • www.ccsrobotics.com
MOBILEROBOTS • www.mobilerobots.com
|