In the most general terms, this invention relates an approach to increase the accuracy of an industrial robot for inspection based on relative calibration for certain robot joint configurations.
In some industrial applications such as inspection of holes on a part the accuracy requirements (around 0.1 mm) exceed what the robot can provide. This limits the applications of the robot in this area.
Inaccuracy of the robot is mainly due to the robot joint mechanical tolerance, arm length deformation, gearbox backlash and so on. When the robot has the large joint angle changes normally a few millimeters error will be observed. This error affects the accuracy of the work object measurement as well as the tool center point (TCP) calibration.
However although the overall accuracy of the robot is relatively low, it has much higher repeatability (i.e. 50 micros). When the robot moves in a small area and certain joint configurations it behaves high repeatability and high accuracy. The goal of calibration is to increase the robot accuracy approaching to its repeatability in a small working volume. It has been found that when the robot has the translation only it can maintain the high accuracy (close to its repeatability in the small area). For translation almost all the joints will change to make a linear motion. However they only have small joint angle changes.
Since the robot accuracy can be maintained if the robot has only small joint angle changes, in the application such as inspection of holes in a part we can divide hundreds holes into zones. For each zone the robot can reach all the holes for inspection and machining with small joint angle variations. The calibration is conducted with a master or dummy work piece for all different zones. The following is the procedure.
a Making a Masterwork Piece.
The master work piece is selected that is similar to the work piece that will be inspected. The master piece can be one under which all the hole locations are known. The location of all the holes on the master work piece is determined precisely. They are considered as the theoretical values.
b Determining the Work Zone
Group all the holes on the working piece into individual zones. In each zone all the hole positions can be inspected with small robot joint angle changes.
c Measurement of the Master Piece
Use the vision system (or other measurement tool) to measure the positions of all the holes on the master piece. First use the vision system to measurement some geometry feature and create the work object CS based on the measured geometry. All the measurement will be based on this work object CS.
d Transformation Matrix is Formed Based on Measured Data Set and Theoretical Data (Calibration Matrix)
A transform matrix is formed based on the measured hole positions and their theoretical values for each individual zone. This matrix will be used to compensate for the measurement error due to the robot tolerance.
e Measurement of the Work Piece Under Inspection.
Place the work piece under inspection at the same location as the master work piece. Run the same robot program to create the work object coordinate system (CS). Measure all the cooling holes on the part. During the measurement try to keep the same robot joint configuration as for the master piece for each individual zone.
f Correct the Measurement Results with Calibration Matrix
Due to the robot error the measured hole positions may not be accurate. Multiplying the measured results by the calibration matrix performs the correction.
1 holes on work piece
2 work piece to be measured
3 means for measuring
4 robot
As an example we will address a specific process of the cooling hole inspection on a vane or blade in the following. The inspection of the cooling hole on a vane is conducted with a vision system that is mounted on the robot arm. The vision system consists of a laser scanner and a camera. The laser scanner is used to scan a surface around the hole opening. The camera is used to detect the image position of the hole opening.
In the first step the orientation of the hole axis is determined by using alignment algorithm. Then the hole position is determined by intersecting the hole axis with the surface around the hole opening.
The following is an example to illustrate the calibration process.
For a specific working zone on the part (vane) the location of all the holes are measured with very high precision tools within 50 microns tolerance.
The results are formed as the theoretical data set M1 and are listed as follows
The measured results with the vision system and robot are formed as the calibration data set M2 and are listed
The transformation between two sets of data is the calibration matrix for this specific zone. It is determined by the following relations
T12=M2*pinv(M1)
Where pinv is the persuade inverse of the matrix.
The difference after transform (fitting error) will be
Place a work piece on the same location as the master piece, do the measurement with the vision system for the corresponding holes. The measured results are
The corrected position will be