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Intro To Mechatronics: T.C.Kanish, SMBS

1) Mechatronics is defined as the synergistic integration of sensors, actuators, signal conditioning, power electronics, decision and control algorithms, and computer hardware and software. 2) The document traces the evolution of mechatronics from predominantly mechanical designs in the Industrial Revolution to today's highly integrated electro-mechanical designs that combine electronics, control, and computing. 3) Key elements of mechatronics systems include mechanical, electromechanical, electrical/electronic, and control/computing hardware components that are integrated through interdisciplinary design.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
71 views

Intro To Mechatronics: T.C.Kanish, SMBS

1) Mechatronics is defined as the synergistic integration of sensors, actuators, signal conditioning, power electronics, decision and control algorithms, and computer hardware and software. 2) The document traces the evolution of mechatronics from predominantly mechanical designs in the Industrial Revolution to today's highly integrated electro-mechanical designs that combine electronics, control, and computing. 3) Key elements of mechatronics systems include mechanical, electromechanical, electrical/electronic, and control/computing hardware components that are integrated through interdisciplinary design.

Uploaded by

Harshan Arumugam
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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T.C.

Kanish, SMBS

Intro to Mechatronics

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics Defined I
The name [mechatronics] was coined by Ko Kikuchi, now president of Yasakawa Electric Co., Chiyoda-Ku, Tokyo.
R. Comerford, Mecha what? IEEE Spectrum, 31(8), 46-49, 1994.

The word, mechatronics is composed of mecha from mechanics and tronics from electronics. In other words, technologies and developed products will be incorporating electronics more and more into mechanisms, intimately and organically, and making it impossible to tell where one ends and the other begins.
T. Mori, Mechatronics, Yasakawa Internal Trademark Application Memo, 21.131.01, July 12, 1969.

Mechanics

mecha Mechatronics

Eletronics

tronics

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics Defined II
Integration of electronics, control engineering, and mechanical engineering.
W. Bolton, Mechatronics: Electronic Control Systems in Mechanical Engineering, Longman, 1995.

Application of complex decision making to the operation of physical systems.


D. M. Auslander and C. J. Kempf, Mechatronics: Mechanical System Interfacing, Prentice-Hall, 1996.

Synergistic integration of mechanical engineering with electronics and intelligent computer control in the design and manufacturing of industrial products and processes.
F. Harshama, M. Tomizuka, and T. Fukuda, Mechatronics-what is it, why, and how?-and editorial, IEEE/ASME Trans. on Mechatronics, 1(1), 1-4, 1996.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics Defined III


Synergistic use of precision engineering, control theory, computer science, and sensor and actuator technology to design improved products and processes.
S. Ashley, Getting a hold on mechatronics, Mechanical Engineering, 119(5), 1997.

Methodology used for the optimal design of electromechanical products.


D. Shetty and R. A Kolk, Mechatronics System Design, PWS Pub. Co., 1997.

Field of study involving the analysis, design, synthesis, and selection of systems that combine electronics and mechanical components with modern controls and microprocessors.
D. G. Alciatore and M. B. Histand, Introduction to Mechatronics and Measurement Systems, McGraw Hill, 1998.

Aside: Web site devoted to definitions of mechatronics:


http://www.engr.colostate.edu/~dga/mechatronics/definitions.html

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics: Working Definition for us

Mechatronics is the synergistic integration of sensors, actuators, signal conditioning, power electronics, decision and control algorithms, and computer hardware and software to manage complexity, uncertainty, and communication in engineered systems.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Product Realization Paradigm

Engineered products frequently involve components from more than one discipline Traditional product realization
Discipline specific sequential process (design then manufacture) Drawback: cost overruns due to redesign/re-tooling

A better but still deficient approach


Discipline specific concurrent process (design for manufacturing) Bottleneck: sub-optimal integration

Mechatronics based product realization exploits


Integrated process founded upon interdisciplinary synergy

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Disciplinary Foundations of Mechatronics


Mechanical Engineering Electrical Engineering Computer Engineering Computer/Information Systems

Information Systems

Mechanical Systems

Mechatrnoics Computer Systems

Electrical Systems

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Multi-/Cross-/Inter-Disciplinary

Products and processes requiring inputs from more than one discipline can be realized through following types of interactions.
Multi-disciplinary: This is an additive process of brining multiple disciplines together to bear on a problem. Cross-disciplinary: In this process, one discipline is examined from the perspective of another discipline. Inter-disciplinary: This is an integrative process involving two or more disciplines simultaneously to bear on a problem.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Sequential/Concurrent Product Realization

Sequential and discipline specific concurrent design processes for product realization are at best multi-disciplinary calling upon discipline specialists to design by discipline.
Design mechanical system plant. Select sensors and actuators and mount on plant. Design signal conditioning and power electronics. Design and implement control algorithm using electrical, electronics, microprocessor, microcontroller, or microcomputer based hardware.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics-based Product Realization


Systems engineering allows design, analysis, and synthesis of products and processes involving components from multiple disciplines. Mechatronics exploits systems engineering to guide the product realization process from design, model, simulate, analyze, refine, prototype, validate, and deployment cycle. In mechatronics-based product realization: mechanical, electrical, and computer engineering and information systems are integrated throughout the design process so that the final products can be better than the sum of its parts. Mechatronics system is not
simply a multi-disciplinary system simply an electromechanical system just a control system

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronic Design Process

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Evolution of Mechatronics as a Contemporary Design Paradigm


Technological advances in design, manufacturing, and operation of engineered products/devices/processes can be traced through:
Industrial revolution Semiconductor revolution Information revolution

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Industrial Revolution
Allowed design of products and processes for energy conversion and transmission thus allowing the use of energy to do useful work. Engineering designs of this era were largely mechanical
e.g., operations of motion transmission, sensing, actuation, and computation were performed using mechanical components such as cams, gears, levers, and linkages).

Purely mechanical systems suffer from


Power amplification inability. Energy losses due to tolerances, inertia, and friction.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Examples of Predominantly Mechanical Designs

Float Valve Bi-metallic Strip

Watts Governor

Cam Operated Switch Thermostat

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Semiconductor Revolution
Led to the creation of integrated circuit (IC) technology. Effective, miniaturized, power electronics could amplify and deliver needed amount of power to actuators. Signal conditioning electronics could filter and encode sensory data in analog/digital format. Hard-wired, on-board, discrete analog/digital ICs provided rudimentary computational and decision-making circuits for control of mechanical devices.

An Integrated Circuit

An A2D Converter

An Operational Amplifier

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Information Revolution
Development of VLSI technology led to the introduction of microprocessor, microcomputer, and microcontroller. Now computing hardware is ubiquitous, cheap, and small. As computing hardware can be effortlessly interfaced with real world electromechanical systems, it is now routinely embedded in engineered products/processes for decision-making.
Microcontrollers are replacing precision mechanical components, e.g., precisionmachined camshaft that in many applications functions as a timing device. Programmability of microcontrollers is providing a versatile and flexible alternative to the hard-wired analog/digital computational hardware. Integrated computer-electrical-mechanical devices are now capable of converting, transmitting, and processing both the physical energy and the virtual energy (information).

Result: Highly efficient products and processes are now being developed by judicious selection and integration of sensors, actuators, signal conditioning, power electronics, decision and control algorithms, and computer hardware and software.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics Revolution: Example

Masterless Cam Grinder

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Elements of MechatronicsMechanical
Mechanical elements refer to
mechanical structure, mechanism, thermo-fluid, and hydraulic aspects of a mechatronics system.

Mechanical elements may include static/dynamic characteristics. A mechanical element interacts with its environment purposefully. Mechanical elements require physical power to produce motion, force, heat, etc.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Machine Components: Basic Elements


Gear, rack, pinion, etc.

Chain and sprocket Inclined plane wedge

Cam and Follower

Lever Slider-Crank

Linkage

Wheel/Axle

Springs

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Elements of MechatronicsElectromechanical
Electromechanical elements refer to:
Sensors
A variety of physical variables can be measured using sensors, e.g., light using photo-resistor, level and displacement using potentiometer, direction/tilt using magnetic sensor, sound using microphone, stress and pressure using strain gauge, touch using micro-switch, temperature using thermistor, and humidity using conductivity sensor

Actuators
DC servomotor, stepper motor, relay, solenoid, speaker, light emitting diode (LED), shape memory alloy, electromagnet, and pump apply commanded action on the physical process

IC-based sensors and actuators (digital-compass, -potentiometer, etc.).

Flexiforce Sensor

DC Motor

Pneumatic Cylinder

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Elements of MechatronicsElectrical/Electronic
Electrical elements refer to:
Electrical components (e.g., resistor (R), capacitor (C), inductor (L), transformer, etc.), circuits, and analog signals

Electronic elements refer to:


analog/digital electronics, transistors, thyristors, opto-isolators, operational amplifiers, power electronics, and signal conditioning

The electrical/electronic elements are used to interface electromechanical sensors and actuators to the control interface/computing hardware elements

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Elements of MechatronicsControl Interface/Computing Hardware


Control interface/computing hardware elements refer to:
Analog-to-digital (A2D) converter, digital-to-analog (D2A) converter, digital input/output (I/O), counters, timers, microprocessor, microcontroller, data acquisition and control (DAC) board, and digital signal processing (DSP) board

Control interface hardware allows analog/digital interfacing


communication of sensor signal to the control computer and communication of control signal from the control computer to the actuator

Control computing hardware implements a control algorithm, which uses sensor measurements, to compute control actions to be applied by the actuator.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Elements of Mechatronics Computer/Information System


Computer elements refer to hardware/software utilized to perform:
computer-aided dynamic system analysis, optimization, design, and simulation virtual instrumentation rapid control prototyping hardware-in-the-loop simulation PC-based data acquisition and control

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Elements of Mechatronics
Typical knowledgebase for optimal design and operation of mechatronic systems comprises of:
Dynamic system modeling and analysis
Thermo-fluid, structural, hydraulic, electrical, chemical, biological, etc.

Decision and control theory Sensors and signal conditioning Actuators and power electronics Data acquisition
A2D, D2A, digital I/O, counters, timers, etc.

Hardware interfacing Rapid control prototyping Embedded computing

Balance theory, simulation, hardware, and software

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Key Elements of Mechatronics

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics Applications
Smart consumer products: home security, camera, microwave oven, toaster, dish washer, laundry washer-dryer, climate control units, etc. Medical: implant-devices, assisted surgery, haptic, etc. Defense: unmanned air, ground, and underwater vehicles, smart munitions, jet engines, etc. Manufacturing: robotics, machines, processes, etc. Automotive: climate control, antilock brake, active suspension, cruise control, air bags, engine management, safety, etc. Network-centric, distributed systems: distributed robotics, telerobotics, intelligent highways, etc.

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Structural Control

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Home Automation
Using a computer:
Turn on the lights at preset times Adjust brightness Turn on the heat at preset times or temperatures Serve as a security system

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Robotics

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics @ Poly
http://mechatronics.poly.edu/

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics @ Poly
CSS: Service Outreach

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics @ Poly

Remote Robot Arm Manipulation Remote Emergency Notification System

Type X

The Smart Walker

T.C.Kanish, SMBS

Mechatronics @ Poly

Smart Irrigation System Safe N Sound Driver

Remote Emergency Notification System

Smart Cane

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