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A review of CAD‐based robot path planning for spray painting

Heping Chen (Robotics and Automation Laboratory, ABB Corporate Research Center, Windsor, Connecticut, USA)
Thomas Fuhlbrigge (Robotics and Automation Laboratory, ABB Corporate Research Center, Windsor, Connecticut, USA)
Xiongzi Li (Robotics and Automation Laboratory, ABB Corporate Research Center, Windsor, Connecticut, USA)

Industrial Robot

ISSN: 0143-991x

Article publication date: 9 January 2009

2165

Abstract

Purpose

Paint path planning for industrial robots is critical for uniform paint distribution, process cycle time and material waste, etc. However, paint path planning is still a costly and time‐consuming process. Currently paint path planning has always caused a bottle‐neck for manufacturing automation because typical manual teaching methods are tedious, error‐prone and skill‐dependent. Hence, it is essential to develop automated tool path‐planning methods to replace manual paint path planning. The purpose of this paper is to review the existing automated tool path‐planning methods, and investigate their advantages and disadvantages.

Design/methodology/approach

The approach takes the form of a review of automated tool path‐planning methods, to investigate the advantages and disadvantages of the current technologies.

Findings

Paint path planning is a very complicated task considering complex parts, paint process requirements and complicated spraying tools. There are some research and development efforts in this area. Based on the review of the methods used for paint path planning and simulation, the paper concludes that: the tessellated CAD model formats have many advantages in paint path planning and paint deposition simulation. However, the tessellated CAD model formats lack edge and connection information. Hence, it may not be suitable for some applications requiring edge following, such as welding. For the spray gun model, more complicated models, such as 2D models, should be used for both path planning and paint distribution simulation. Paint path generation methods should be able to generate a paint path for complex automotive parts without assumptions, such as presupposing a part with a continuous surface.

Practical implications

The paper makes possible automated path generation for spray‐painting process using industrial robots such that the path‐planning time can be reduced, the product quality improved, etc.

Originality/value

The paper provides a useful review of current paint path‐planning methodologies based on the CAD models of parts.

Keywords

Citation

Chen, H., Fuhlbrigge, T. and Li, X. (2009), "A review of CAD‐based robot path planning for spray painting", Industrial Robot, Vol. 36 No. 1, pp. 45-50. https://doi.org/10.1108/01439910910924666

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2009, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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