6533b7d2fe1ef96bd125ebc1
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Remote programming of network robots within the UJI Industrial Robotics Telelaboratory: FPGA vision and SNRP network protocol
Raul WirzPedro J. SanzJosé J. FernándezJorge SalesRoque MarínJosé M. ClaverGermán Leónsubject
EngineeringMachine visionDistributed systemsRobots industrialsRobots IndustrialVisió per ordinador -- Aplicacions industrialsElectrical and Electronic EngineeringProtocol (object-oriented programming)e-learningNetwork architectureTeleroboticsbusiness.industryLocal area networkRoboticsarray (FPGA) visionInternet in educationEnsenyament virtualmultirobot programmingControl and Systems Engineeringhigh-performance field-programmable gateEmbedded systemRobotComputer visioninternetArtificial intelligencebusinessCommunications protocol:Informàtica::Robòtica [Àrees temàtiques de la UPC]industrial robotics telelaboratorydescription
This paper presents the UJI Industrial Robotics Telelaboratory, which lets Ph.D. and Master’s degree students perform robotics and computer vision tele-experiments. By using this system, students are able to program experiments remotely via the Web, in order to combine the use of a field-programmable gate array (FPGA) to provide real-time vision processing, a conveyor belt, and a Motoman industrial manipulator. This paper introduces the novel SNRP protocol (i.e., Simple Network Robot Protocol), which permits the integration of network robots and sensors within an e-learning platform in a simple and reliable manner. As long as the students are able to interact remotely with a real robotic scenario, this system helps students very much to learn robotics control techniques like visual servoing control, vision for industrial applications, and robotics manipulation. The various components of the system are connected via a 100BaseT Ethernet network and follow the SNRP protocol, which grants simple access to generic networked devices using enhanced HTTP-based connections. Moreover, the whole telelaboratory is connected to the Internet through a router that permits the user to control the networked devices according to security constraints. The SNRP architecture is compared with a Common Object Request Broker Architecture-based approach, which was used in a previous telelaboratory. This paper describes two principle contributions: the design of a novel SNRP network architecture for the tercommunication of robots and sensors within an e-learning telelaboratory and the integration of a programmable FPGA vision system, which allows students to learn not only robotic techniques but also the design of high-performance circuits for industrial vision applications. Peer Reviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-12-01 |