Making Industrial Robots Collaborative

March 12, 2020
With its FreeMove system in use in the aerospace, automotive, appliance, and construction equipment manufacturing industries, Veo Robotics is proving that high-speed, heavy-payload robots can be cobots too.

Collaborative robots, or cobots, have helped generate a resurgence in industry’s interest in robotics. This is occurring in response to the difficulties that industry faces in attracting and retaining skilled workers and improving worker safety and ergonomics.

Despite the headway cobots have made in industry, their design relegates them to mimicking simple, repetitive tasks typically done by humans. The high-speed heavy lifting done by industrial robots remains outside the scope of most cobot designs. Increasingly, technology companies are devising ways to make industrial robots more collaborative.

At the Smart Production Systems conference in Nuremberg last fall, I reported on work being done by Mitsubishi and Real Time Robotics to bring collaborative capabilities to industrial robots. More recently, I had a chance to meet with Clara Vu, co-founder and CTO of Veo Robotics, and Patrick Sobalvarro, Veo's president, CEO and co-founder, at the Tech Crunch Robotics + AI conference in Berkeley, Calif.

The cages around industrial robots are not made to keep robots in, said Vu, but to keep people from getting hurt. “You want robots that can lift heavy payloads, move them quickly and place the payloads precisely. That’s why we’re focusing on a sensing and vision system that provides safety for industrial robots,” she said.

Veo’s FreeMove system is composed of four to eight camera sensors and a computing platform that uses algorithms “built from the bottom up” for this kind of application, Vu explained. “FreeMove uses computer vision to do a 3D analysis of the workspace to determine placement of fixed machinery, robots, and people; then it projects the robot’s potential positions over time,” she said. With the ISO 10218 robot workcell safety standard as its base, FreeMove is designed to ensure robots “are never a hazard to a person so that you can build a workcell in which humans and machines can work closely together."

Vu added that Veo’s approach with FreeMove applies to not just to workcell safety, but can also be extended for application throughout a line or an entire factory.

Explaining FreeMove’s technology, Vu noted that manufacturers commonly uses computer vision, like that found in the FreeMove system, for inspection, but she added “We use different algorithms. We do a 3D reconstruction of the space that includes occupancy and occlusion analysis using deterministic algorithms, rather than machine learning, so that we can see into any space in the environment that we can’t prove is empty so that safety certification can be achieved.”

FreeMove’s custom sensors have redundant time-of-flight imagers to compare images on a pixel-by-pixel level for use in higher level processors, Vu said, adding, “It’s a novel technique for reproducing robot motion to predict where the robot arm could go before being safely brought to a stop using robot kinematics.”

Beyond the pure technology aspects of Veo’s FreeMove, Vu said an important part of the company’s approach is to have their system perform in a way that will train the humans working with it. “FreeMove controls industrial robots so that the robot arm slows and stops in a very predictable way,” Vu said. “Humans are good at reacting to that and optimizing around that. We also show the robot’s internal state to workers so they can understand that. This is the best way to create functional interaction.”

She explained that the FreeMove system features a monitor that shows users the view as the “system sees it—what it can and can’t see, and even a robot future cloud [where the robot’s arm could extend to] shown in a 3D visualization. This is not required for system to run but it’s there for users to see.”

Sobalvarro noted Veo currently has relationships with ABB, Fanuc, KUKA, and Yaskawa and that the system is currently in use at aerospace, automotive, household appliance, and construction equipment manufacturing sites. None of Veo’s current end users are allowing the company to divulge their names yet, which is understandable for a startup company, but Vu noted that the ARM [Advanced Robotics for Manufacturing] Institute, a government funded consortium, has made its use of FreeMove public.

To date, Veo has received $28 million in funding ranging from companies such as Siemens-backed Next47  (which invested because of Veo’s focus on safety through its work with international standards organizations), to Silicon Valley investors Google Ventures and Lux Capital, to  Baidu Ventures.

Referencing a current user using FreeMove for a collaborative robot palletizing application, Sobalvarro said this application is important demonstration of FreeMove because “when a case erector goes out of spec, and you’re faced with a tag out/lock out process, that’s a minimum 15-minute production stop. We make it so a production worker can walk in when necessary and operations will resume automatically when they walk away.”

Despite the advances being made by automation to perform tasks formerly done by humans, Vu believes manufacturing will likely always need humans because of their flexibility. “The future of manufacturing will be humans doing what humans do best and robots doing what robots do best.” She believes the current general view of artificial intelligence—i.e., that robots can potentially replace humans—is holding robots back because that leads researchers to try to get robots to do what humans do. “Let robots be robots,” she said. “There’s a huge amount of value to be unlocked here.”

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