Laminator trust in human–robot collaboration for manufacturing fibre‐reinforced composites

Abstract Fibre‐reinforced composites manufacturing is a large and growing industry, with much of the work carried out manually by skilled human laminators. The physical nature of the work can be significantly deleterious to these workers' health, while growing demand requires increased rates of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:IET Collaborative Intelligent Manufacturing
Main Authors: Laura Rhian Pickard, Michael Elkington
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-12-01
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1049/cim2.12123
Description
Summary:Abstract Fibre‐reinforced composites manufacturing is a large and growing industry, with much of the work carried out manually by skilled human laminators. The physical nature of the work can be significantly deleterious to these workers' health, while growing demand requires increased rates of manufacture. Human–robot collaborative manufacturing offers a potential solution but requires the human to feel confident working with the robot and trust that they will be safe. Successful human trials of two different approaches to collaborative lay‐up of fibre‐reinforced plastic composites are presented, with tasks representative of manufacturing challenges in industry. Volunteer responses are measured by questionnaires, with users reporting the processes to be safe, simple to use and allowing greater ease of manufacturing than manual‐only lay‐up.
ISSN:2516-8398