IROS 2019 Workshop

- Friday, November 8th, 2019

Factory of the Future
How to digitalize the robot-aided manufacturing process in Industry 4.0?
Robotics is one of the great technological revolutions of our century, with fundamental implications for a wide range of different industries.
Full-Day Workshop at IROS 2019 in Macau

Industrial mass production is no longer conceivable without robotics and automation. The trend in modern manufacturing is towards individualized products, tailored to the customer, with an exploding variety of variants and much shorter product life-cycles. This, in order to satisfy the market demand of a flexible and customizable industrial production. In this context, the classic way of conceiving industrial automation, which is mainly focused on purely automated or manual forms of production, is clearly reaching its limits.

Nowadays, robots and autonomous systems, partly in direct human-robot cooperation, are moving into the production of smaller batch sizes and can thus create a decisive competitive advantage in all industries. This flexibilisation also includes opportunities to optimize energy and material flows for resource-efficient production.

In our view, a modern manufactory or Factory of the Future needs a broad range of digital production technologies, robot systems, and applications for flexible and networked manufacturing processes effectively integrated in different production scenarios. One focus is on the realization of robust robot-supported manufacturing processes using digitization approaches and industry 4.0. This will make factory applications in particular more efficient, more cost-effective, safer, and more resource-conserving. More in details, a competitive Factory of the Future has to pursue the following objectives:

… of new digital production chains from the digital model to the automatically assembled product. In doing so, resource and energy consumption as well as costs are reduced despite flexibilisation and human personnel are relieved. In this context, digital mapping, the so-called “Digital Twin”, can be used during the entire production cycle of a component, e.g. for preliminary design, design support, virtual commissioning, or optimization of production processes and plants.

… of versatile digital production concepts through mobile robotic systems and networked, intelligent production and assembly robots. For assembly, inspection, maintenance and disposal of products and large structures, the use of mobile manipulators and large robot arms in big production lines seems a promising solution until the “futuristic” use of humanoid robots will become a concrete option.

… collaboration between humans and robots as well as between humans and machines in general in the cognitive production plant of the future. Robotic systems and industry 4.0 concepts have a proven broad impact on general industrial robotics. Lightweight robots are currently undergoing a fundamental change towards human-robot cooperation and sensitive manipulation in automotive manufacturing, production in SMEs, and in surgery. In addition to fully automated solutions, modern manufacturies increasingly relying on advanced assistance systems to support people in order to be able to act highly flexibly and efficiently.

… with high quality standards through efficient material flow, advanced assembly capabilities, and self-reconfigurable machineries and workcells.

The objectives of the Factory of the Future are ambitious and therefore challenging to pursue. The enormous technical challenges need the bundling and closely interlinking of expertise in different fields related to robotics and autonomous systems, like robotic assistance, perception, sensor technology, control, and AI. Only with the joint effort of such expertise, holistic answers to the questions of production and assistance of the future will be possible. This workshop aims at presenting and discussing current research results in the broad field of robot-aided manufacturing, directing the way towards novel innovations and open issues. Some of the questions we will try to answer are:

  • Which level of integration digital solutions have in current in industrial scenarios?
  • Which is the role of intuitive robot programming and human-robot collaboration in flexible manufacturing?
  • Which is the role of mobile and dexterous manipulation in smart factories?
  • Are reconfigurable workcells ready to use in mass production?

In one sentence, our workshop will discuss what has been done and what we need to do to realize the Factory of the Future.

TOPICS OF INTEREST

Intuitive robot programming
Reconfigurable workcells
Interfaces for intuitive human-robot collaboration
Learning for flexible manufacturing
Navigation and mobile manipulation in industry
Digital twins and augmented reality
Sensors and actuators for adavanced autonomous assembly
CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS

We welcome researchers in the field to submit papers to be presented as posters. Submitted manuscripts should be between 2 and 4 pages, formatted according to IROS standards using the Paper Template downloadable on the IEEE IROS 2019 website (two-column format). Submission of videos accompanying the papers is always encouraged.

01.
Video submissions are also welcomed.

For video submissions, we require a video no longer than 3 minutes formatted according to IROS standards and an extended abstract (1 to 2 pages using IROS 2019 Paper Template) describing the results in the video. Authors of accepted papers will present their work during the poster sessions.

02.
WHERE TO GO

Please submit your contributions via e-mail to Matteo Saveriano and Roman Weitschat before September 15. Papers and videos will be selected based on their originality, relevance to the workshop topics, contributions, technical clarity, and presentation. Accepted papers and videos require that at least one of the authors register to the workshop. Accepted papers and videos will not appear in the conference proceedings.

03.
Important dates
  • Submission deadline for papers and videos: 15 September, 2019
  • Notification of acceptance: 01 October, 2019

Program & Schedule

Time
Speaker
Organization
Status
09:00 Opening Organizers
09:10 Alin Albu-Schäffer DLR and TUM lists_page_icon_3
09:50 George G.Q. Huang The University of Hong Kong lists_page_icon_3
10:30 Teaser presentations (3-5 min.), poster session, and coffee break
11:00 Norbert Krüger University of Southern Denmark lists_page_icon_3
11:40 Francesco Ferro PAL Robotics lists_page_icon_3
12:20 Markus Rickert FORTISS lists_page_icon_3
13:00 Lunch break
14:30 Sylvain Calinon IDIAP lists_page_icon_3
15:10 Aleš Ude Jožef Stefan Institute lists_page_icon_3
15:50 Teaser presentations (3-5 min.), poster session, and coffee break
16:30 Andrea Zanchettin Politecnico di Milano lists_page_icon_4
17:10 Pietro Falco ABB Corporate Research lists_page_icon_4
17:50 Round Table Discussion
18:30 End

INVITED SPEAKERS

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Alin Albu-Schäffer
German Aerospace Center (DLR) and Technical University of Munich, Germany
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George G.Q. Huang
The University of Hong Kong, China
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Norbert Krüger
University of Southern Denmark, Denmark
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Pietro Falco
ABB Corporate Research, Sweden
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Markus Rickert
FORTISS, Germany
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Sylvain Calinon
Idiap Research Institute and EPFL, Switzerland
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Aleš Ude
Jožef Stefan Institute, Slovenia
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Andrea Zanchettin
Politecnico di Milano, Italy
Organizers
matteo 1-36
Matteo Saveriano, Dr.-Ing
Post-Doctoral Researcher / Contact Person

Universität Innsbruck
Innrain 52, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria
https://iis.uibk.ac.at/people/saveriano

weitschat
Roman Weitschat, Dr.-Ing
Post-Doctoral Researcher

Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics
German Aerospace Center (DLR)
Münchener Straße 20, 82234, Weßling, Germany
https://rmc.dlr.de/roman.weitschat