Fr. 188.00

Computer control of flexible manufacturing systems - Research and development

Anglais · Livre de poche

Expédition généralement dans un délai de 1 à 2 semaines (titre imprimé sur commande)

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With the approach of the 21st century, and the current trends in manufacturing, the role of computer-controlled flexible manufacturing an integral part in the success of manufacturing enterprises. will take Manufacturing environments are changing to small batch (with batch sizes diminishing to a quantity of one), larger product variety, produc tion on demand with low lead times, with the ability to be 'agile.' This is in stark contrast to conventional manufacturing which has relied on economies of scale, and where change is viewed as a disruption and is therefore detrimental to production. Computer integrated manufac turing (CIM) and flexible manufacturing practices are a key component in the transition from conventional manufacturing to the 'new' manu facturing environment. While the use of computers in manufacturing, from controlling indi vidual machines (NC, Robots, AGVs etc.) to controlling flexible manu facturing systems (FMS) has advanced the flexibility of manufacturing environments, it is still far from reaching its full potential in the environment of the future. Great strides have been made in individual technologies and control of FMS has been the subject of considerable research, but computerized shop floor control is not nearly as flexible or integrated as hyped in industrial and academic literature. In fact, the integrated systems have lagged far behind what could be achieved with existing technology.

Table des matières

1. The role of CIM architectures in flexible manufacturing systems.- 2. Hierarchical control architectures from shop level to end effectors.- 3. Characteristics of computerized scheduling and control of manufacturing systems.- 4. Priority rules and predictive control algorithms for on-line scheduling of FMS.- 5. Scheduling of automated guided vehicles for material handling: dynamic shop floor feedback.- 6. An integrated planning and control system for scheduling in flexible manufacturing systems.- 7. Autonomous control for open manufacturing systems.- 8. Applications of Petri net methodology to manufacturing systems.- 9. Recent developments in modeling and performance analysis tools for manufacturing systems.- 10. Qualitative intelligent modeling of manufacturing systems.- 11. Formal models of execution function in shop floor control.- 12. Object-oriented design of flexible manufacturing systems.- 13. Efficient and dependable manufacturing - a software perpective.- 14. Process plan representation for shop floor control.- 15. Integration of cutting-tool management with shop-floor control in flexible machining systems.- 16. An object-oriented control architecture for flexible manufacturing cells.

Résumé

With the approach of the 21st century, and the current trends in manufacturing, the role of computer-controlled flexible manufacturing an integral part in the success of manufacturing enterprises. will take Manufacturing environments are changing to small batch (with batch sizes diminishing to a quantity of one), larger product variety, produc tion on demand with low lead times, with the ability to be 'agile.' This is in stark contrast to conventional manufacturing which has relied on economies of scale, and where change is viewed as a disruption and is therefore detrimental to production. Computer integrated manufac turing (CIM) and flexible manufacturing practices are a key component in the transition from conventional manufacturing to the 'new' manu facturing environment. While the use of computers in manufacturing, from controlling indi vidual machines (NC, Robots, AGVs etc.) to controlling flexible manu facturing systems (FMS) has advanced the flexibility of manufacturing environments, it is still far from reaching its full potential in the environment of the future. Great strides have been made in individual technologies and control of FMS has been the subject of considerable research, but computerized shop floor control is not nearly as flexible or integrated as hyped in industrial and academic literature. In fact, the integrated systems have lagged far behind what could be achieved with existing technology.

Détails du produit

Collaboration Joshi (Editeur), S Joshi (Editeur), S. Joshi (Editeur), S Smith (Editeur), S Smith (Editeur), J. S. Smith (Editeur), J.S. Smith (Editeur), Jeffrey Smith (Editeur), Jeffrey S. Smith (Editeur)
Edition Springer Netherlands
 
Langues Anglais
Format d'édition Livre de poche
Sortie 17.10.2013
 
EAN 9789401045384
ISBN 978-94-0-104538-4
Pages 478
Dimensions 155 mm x 26 mm x 235 mm
Poids 745 g
Illustrations XII, 478 p.
Catégorie Sciences naturelles, médecine, informatique, technique > Technique > Technique chimique

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