posted on 2017-06-09, 10:28authored byNiels Lohse, Hitendra Hirani, S. Ratchev, Michele Turitto
Assembly forms eighty per cent of the cost of manufacturing a product and this is where the greatest competitive advantage can be gained as assembly has not been fully understood in the research community. This paper reports on the development of a specification ontology to describe assembly processes at a level where they can be mapped to individual assembly modules. The ontology is an extension of the process specification language (PSL) defined by NIST. The developed ontology is applied to an existing case to demonstrate the capabilities. It is believed that the development of this ontology will lead to the opening of further channels for research in modular control and modular assembly processes, which are building blocks for evolvable assembly systems
Funding
The reported work is partially funded by the
Department of Trade and Industry in the United Kingdom as part of the EUREKA Factory E!2851 E-RACE project.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Published in
ISATP 2005: 6th IEEE Symposium on Assembly and Task Planning
Assembly and Task Planning: From Nano to Macro Assembly and Manufacturing, 2005. (ISATP 2005). The 6th IEEE International Symposium on
Pages
242 - 247
Citation
LOHSE, N. ...et al., 2005. An ontology for the definition and validation of assembly processes for evolvable assembly systems. Presented at the 6th IEEE Symposium on Assembly and Task Planning: From Nano to Macro Assembly and Manufacturing, (ISATP 2005), Montreal, Canada, 19-21st July, pp. 242-247.
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