Care-O-bot 3: Always at your service

July 1, 2008 Care-O-bot 3: Always at your service

The new Care-O-bot® has a highly flexible arm and a three-finger hand with which it can pick up items such as a bottle. Force sensors prevent it from gripping too hard. © Fraunhofer

Who doesn’t long for household help at times? Service robots will soon be able to relieve us of heavy, dirty, monotonous or irksome tasks. Research scientists have now presented a new generation of household robots, the “Care-O-bot® 3”.

The one-armed robot glides slowly to the kitchen table. With its three fingers, it carefully picks up the bottle of apple juice and puts it next to the glasses on the tray in front of it. Then it glides back into the lounge and serves the drinks to the guests. This is how artificial assistants might work in future.

Only 1.45 meters high, Care-O-bot® 3 is the prototype of a new generation of service robots designed to help humans in the household. The quick-to-learn assistant was developed by research scientists at the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA in Stuttgart.

But how does the robot know where to find the items it needs? And what has been done to make sure the robot does not inadvertently touch a human with its arm? It is fitted with numerous sensors to prevent this from happening. Stereo-vision color cameras, laser scanners and a 3-D range camera enable Care-O-bot® 3 to register its surroundings in three dimensions in real time. If a person moves into the radius of its arm, it stops moving. Another feature of the small, flexible helper is that it can move in any direction.

“This is made possible by an omnidirectional platform with four separately steered and driven wheels,” explains Birgit Graf, who heads the domestic and personal service robotics group at IPA. “In this way, the robot can even pass safely through narrow places in an apartment.” The new Care-O-bot® has a highly flexible arm with seven degrees of freedom and a hand with three fingers. This allows it to pick up bottles, cups and similar objects and to operate machines. Force sensors prevent it from gripping too hard. The arm and the grippers were developed by Schunk.

A tray is mounted at the front of the robot, on which Care-O-Bot® can carry items such as the requested cup of coffee. Integrated in the tray is a touch screen via which the assistant can be controlled. “But the robot can also be directed by spoken commands. Unlike its predecessors, it can even recognize and respond to gestures,” explains Graf. Numerous household articles are stored in the robot’s databases.

It knows, for example, what a cup looks like and where to find it in the kitchen. It can also learn to recognize new objects. The user simply places the unfamiliar object in the robot’s hand so that it can gain a three-dimensional impression of the item. However, the new robot does not look like a human being. “We deliberately moved away from the existing, humanoid service robots when we designed Care-O-bot® 3,” stresses Care-O-bot-3 project manager Christopher Parlitz of IPA.

Source: Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft


   
Rate this story - 4.1 /5 (13 votes)


July 1, 2008 all stories

Comments: 0

4.1 /5 (13 votes)

  • hide
  • Related Stories




  • hide
  • Relevant PhysicsForums posts

  • How to measure recoil force?
    created 46 minutes ago
  • How to obtain time constant of servo motor
    created 3 hours ago
  • How to calculate section constants for rectangular tubes?
    created 8 hours ago
  • how to welding thin SS foil (0.002")?
    created Feb 08, 2010
  • More from Physics Forums - General Engineering

Other News

Robot to take starring roles in S.Korea plays

Electronics / Robotics

created 5 hours ago | popularity 5 / 5 (1) | comments 0

A South Korean-developed robot that played to acclaim in "Robot Princess and the Seven Dwarfs" is set for more leading theatre roles this year, a scientist said Wednesday.


Student Builds Spider Robot From Spare Parts

Student Builds Spider Robot From Spare Parts (w/ Video)

Electronics / Robotics

created 17 hours ago | popularity 4.6 / 5 (11) | comments 3

Picture a spider-like robot that teaches itself to walk, can adapt when damaged and watches its maker as he moves around the room. That might sound terrifying.


Seagate Ships 10,000 RPM 600 GB 2.5-inch Hard Drive

Electronics / Hardware

created 15 hours ago | popularity 2.7 / 5 (3) | comments 0

Seagate today announced worldwide shipments of its Savvio 10K.4 hard disk drive (HDD), the world's highest-capacity and most reliable 2.5-inch enterprise-class drive.


Millimeter-scale, energy-harvesting sensor system developed

Millimeter-scale, energy-harvesting sensor system developed

Electronics / Hardware

created Feb 08, 2010 | popularity 4.8 / 5 (12) | comments 5 | with audio podcast

(PhysOrg.com) -- A 9-cubic millimeter solar-powered sensor system developed at the University of Michigan is the smallest that can harvest energy from its surroundings to operate nearly perpetually.


Robonaut 2: NASA, GM Create Cutting Edge Robotic Technology

Robonaut 2: NASA, GM Create Cutting Edge Robotic Technology

Electronics / Robotics

created Feb 04, 2010 | popularity 4.5 / 5 (13) | comments 9 | with audio podcast

(PhysOrg.com) -- Robonaut is evolving. NASA and General Motors are working together to accelerate development of the next generation of robots and related technologies for use in the automotive and aerospace ...