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Home › News & Events › ARM Institute Announces Selection of New Technology Projects

ARM Institute Announces Selection of New Technology Projects

October 19, 2020

ARM Institute Announces Selection of New Technology Projects

The selected projects are focused on high-value impact to empower U.S. manufacturers using robotics and automation.

October 19, 2020-  The ARM (Advanced Robotics for Manufacturing) Institute is proud to announce the selection of eight new robotics technology projects aligned with ARM’s mission to strengthen U.S. manufacturing and empower workers. A total of $7.5M will be contributed across these eight projects. ARM plans to award $2.9M in project funding, and the participating organizations plan to contribute $4.6M in cost share. To date, ARM has invested in over 70 robotics technology and workforce development projects.

The ARM Institute, in partnership with its 270+ member organizations, identifies areas of need in manufacturing, which are used as strategic focus areas in its project calls. These focus areas have become increasingly important as the nation looks to strengthen supply chains and domestic manufacturing in the wake of COVID-19. Many of the selected projects have the potential to help the manufacturing ecosystem generally, while also equipping the nation to better respond to future crises.

“The ARM Institute, and the Manufacturing USA network as a whole, facilitates dynamic collaboration between diverse organizations for the collective strength the nation,” noted Arnold Kravitz, ARM Chief Technology Officer, “This unique collaboration between competitors can’t be replicated elsewhere and is critical for the security and resiliency of our nation.”

 

“The ARM Institute has grown quickly since its inception in 2017, which has resulted in many impactful projects for both members and the Department of Defense,” said Dr. Greg Hudas, ARM Department of Defense Program Manager, “We are confident that these project selections will make a tangible difference for the U.S. industrial base and manufacturing supply chain.”

Brief descriptions of each selected project are below.

Autonomous Material Handling Robotic System for Medical Devices and Consumer Goods Logistic and E-commerce Applications
Lead: Johnson & Johnson

Partners: IAM Robotics, Carnegie Mellon University

Description: This robotic solution focuses on increasing flexibility in e-commerce to better respond to sudden supply chain disruption demands, which existed before the COVID-19 pandemic and were further exacerbated by the crisis. The project team will work to develop a fully autonomous collaborative robot that can travel to stocked items and pick things from within storage containers.


“Bot Couture”: Robotic Clothing Manufacturing

Lead: Siemens Technology

Partners: Sewbo, Henderson Sewing, ISAIC, Bluewater Defense

Description: Most apparel manufacturing is done abroad, which leads to lengthy supply chains. This supply chain issue poses a significant risk, as seen when the U.S. struggled to scale up production of PPE. This project team will leverage results from a previously funded ARM project to expand upon it by delivering a modular work-cell that can be configured to perform end to end automated assembly of PPEs, such as isolation gowns.


Augmented Reality (AR) Based Human-Robot Interaction

Lead: Boeing Research & Technology

Partners: Siemens, Southwest Research Institute, rpGatta, FANUC America

Description: This project focuses on a user-friendly AR interface that will allow human operators with limited education on robotics programming to program and operate robotic processes for parts maintenance. The team is working to empower workers by supporting the worker transition from menial tasks to robotic operation with limited training needed to make the change. This will build upon an existing talented workforce base while implementing automation to improve accuracy and lower costs.


Automated Induction Welding of Large Thermoplastic Composite Structures

Lead: Raytheon Technologies Research Center

Partners: GrayMatter Robotics, University of South Carolina

Description: Lightweight carbon fiber reinforced thermoplastic composites (CF-TPCs) have been widely recognized as the materials capable of meeting the future aerospace market rate demands with potential recyclability. This project team seeks to develop an automated welding solution that will decrease the time spent on the welding process and expand the application from small and simple parts to large and complex parts.


Automated Bottom Hemming Through Robotic Garment Manipulation

Lead: Siemens Technology

Partners: University of Southern California, Henderson Sewing, Black Swan Textiles, United Sewing Automation

Description: This project team will focus on developing robotic capabilities to perform bottom hemming, the process of performing a circular stitch at the bottom of the T-shirt. This project will also build upon a previously funded ARM project, ultimately resulting in the use of a bimanual robot to pick up a garment from a stack, dynamically readjust its shape, and then insert it into an automatic bottom hemmer. In addition to the technology capabilities, the project team will focus on workforce development aspects to enable operators to easily operate and maintain the system.


Reducing Composite Ply Layup Time on Complex Tools though Use of Robotic Cells

Lead: University of Southern California

Partners: Lockheed Martin, Southwest Research Institute

Description: Current composite layup processes are manual, costly, time-consuming, and suffer from inconsistencies. This project team is working to develop a hybrid cell that will facilitate better human-robotic collaboration in the composite layup process. This is expected to reduce touch labor during the layup process, reduce debulking steps, and increase throughput.


Robotic Assistant for Repurposable Fabric Fusing Operations

Lead: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Partners: Interface Technologies, Hickey Freeman

Description: The U.S. continues to lose apparel manufacturing to international suppliers who offer lower wage costs; however, the apparel industry is ripe for automation. Current processes see human workers touching each piece of fabric and manually picking and placing. This project team is working to develop and an end effector that can pick and place fabric and interlining piece parts and fabric bolts onto the fusing machine conveyor. The team plans to develop open source software modules that can program robots from multiple vendors and leverage collaborative robots that can be easily positioned.


Interoperability and Orchestration of Autonomous Mobile Robots (IO-AMRs)

Lead: Siemens Technology

Partners: FedEx, Yaskawa Motoman, Waypoint Robotics, University of Memphis

Description: Current practice sees each AMR vendor using their custom Fleet Management software platform, making it difficult for end-users to operate a fleet of mixed AMR brands efficiently. This project aims to enable AMR cross vendor communication and management, lowering the barriers for the further adoption of AMRs. The outputs from this project are expected to result in lower training time for operators and increased productivity.


ABOUT THE ARM INSTITUTE

The ARM Institute accelerates the adoption of robotics technologies that are the foundation of every advanced manufacturing activity today and in the future.  We leverage a unique, robust, and diverse ecosystem of partners across industry, academia and government to:

  • make robotics, autonomy, and artificial intelligence more accessible to U.S. manufacturers large and small
  • train and empower the manufacturing workforce
  • strengthen our economy and global competitiveness
  • elevate our nation’s security and resilience

ARM receives funding from the United States Department of Defense and other government agencies to manage programs that develop, demonstrate, and accelerate the early adoption of novel robotic technology and workforce development solutions.  ARM works collaboratively with the government and Institute members to identify areas of need in robotics and workforce development. ARM projects require at least one industry organization participant on each project to ensure that the outputs are relevant, applicable, and impactful. The projects are selected by a team of ARM members and partners spanning government, industry, and academia. Only ARM members can participate in projects. Visit www.arminstitute.org to discover more about our robotics projects. Email [email protected] to learn about membership.

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