Mechatronics:
Education, Research & Development
Prepared by: Dr. rer. nat. Ashraf Aboshosha
Event: http://www.icgst.com/con11/aiml11/index.html
EAEA, NCRRT, Engineering Dept.
www.icgst.com, www.icgst-amc.com
[email protected] Tel.: 0020-12-1804952
Fax.: 0020-2-24115475
Education Research
Development
Education
Bsc., Msc. and PhD regulations (Catalog)
Preparation of curricula guidelines (Printed and Online materials)
Academic advertising for mechatronics
Preparing list of lab equipments
Educational/public training courses (courses and partners)
Comparative survey on local/international mechatronics institutes
Contact with mechatronics pioneers to share ideas and strategies
Inviting our strategic partners to explore the future
Research
Preparing our short/long term research plan (topics,
fund, priorities)
Contacting mechatronics leading firms to join our
strategic partnership
Academic promotion for our research products
Scheduling our academic activities (conferences,
training, visiting Prof. etc.)
Preparing our academic exchange program
Preparing our academic press (small scale)
Contacting our strategic partners to plan the future work
Development
A survey on the local and international job market of mechatronics
A survey on the increasing demand in automation and exploring the
available chances of this field
Preparing a study on mechatronics standards in industry and
automation
Linking education, research and development
What is the Mechatronics?
Mechatronics basically refers to mechanical electrical
systems and is centred on mechanics, electronics,
computing and control which, combined, make possible
the generation of simpler, more economical, reliable and
versatile systems.
The term "mechatronics" was first assigned by Mr. Tetsuro
Mori, a senior engineer of the Japanese company
Yaskawa, in 1969.
What is the Mechatronics?
© Uni North Carolina
Mechatronics Curricula
Introduction to engineering (eng. math, physics, chemistry,
mechanical systems, eng. drawing, etc.),
Engineering software; C, Java, Matlab, Labview, VEE, Linux etc.
Fundamental of mechanical system design and analysis
Electronic devices, circuits and systems
Digital systems, computer architecture and computer interface
Applied control theory (I, II and III)
Robotics (sensors, actuators, control, vision, AI, etc.)
Instrumentation and measurements
Signal & image processing
CAD/CAM, NC and CNC
Embedded systems, sensors, actuators and software
Fine mechanical parts, MEMS and nanotechnology
Integrated mechanical/electrical systems
Language (English)
Mechatronics Labs (6G*N)
۩ Computer software lab
۩ Aero-, thermo- and fluid dynamics
۩ Embedded systems lab
۩ CAD/CAM lab
۩ Digital electronics lab
۩ Robotics
۩ Robocup team lab
۩ Electronics lab
۩ Advanced electricity lab
۩ Lab of mechanical systems
۩ Lab for fundamental chemistry
۩ Lab for basics of physics
۩ Eng. drawing hall
۩ Electrical/mechanical workshops
۩ Language lab
Embedded Systems
A combination of hardware and software which
together form a component of a Mechatronics
systems. An embedded system is designed
to run on its own without human intervention,
and may be required to respond to events in
real time.
Embedded Systems in Automotive
Applications
■ Entertainment
■ Adaptive control
■ Generation II ABS
■Satellite services radio/GPS
■ Heads-up monitoring
■ Tele-operation
■ Night vision
■ Software control
■ Back-up collision sensor
■ Rain-sensing
■ Navigation
■ Auto parking
■ Tire pressure sensing
■ Simulators
■ Holonomic non-holonomic
■ Testing
motion
Hardware, Software, and Firmware
Hardware is the name given to the physical devices and circuitry
of the computer.
Software refers to the programs written for the computer.
Firmware is the term given to programs stored in ROMs or in
Programmable devices which permanently keep their stored
information.
Robotics Curricula
Introduction to Robotics: History, Asimov’s laws, Different types of robot
platforms (humanoid, Car-like, holonomic & non-holonomic, miniature,
manipulators, animators, indoor, outdoor, space robots, medical robots, under
water robots, locomotion, areal robots, educational robots, legged robots,
mobile robots, robot simulators etc.)
Path Planning: objectives and methods (Voronoi, Bug, potential field, visibility,
reactive, road map).
Environment modeling: the general meaning and the applied techniques
(occupancy grid, topological graphs, integrated, 3D modelling).
Distributed sensors: IR, laser, sonar, E-nose, vision, artificial skin, artificial ear
etc.
Robot kinematics and inverse kinematics
Sensors Integration: advantages, weaknesses and methods (Bayes network,
Kalman filter, fuzzy logic, particle filter).
Robot actuators: Hydraulic, pneumatic and electric drives (DC, Ac, servo, and
stepper motors)
Self localization: Introduction and techniques (SLAM, Markov, Bayes network,
expectation maximizing, maximum likelihood).
Robot Platforms (1)
Indoor Robots DLR Gripper NASA Mars Rover Asimo Humanoid
Outdoor Robots Robot Base Station KUKA Manipulator
Robot Platforms (2)
Aibo 4 legged Robot
Qurio Humanoid Robocup Team
NAO Humanoid
Robot Platforms (3)
Snake Robot HEXAPOD Robot Big Dog Robot
Micro Robot Flying UAV Underwater Robot
Robot Platforms (4)
Robot simulators
Robot Platforms (5)
Robot educational kits
CCD Camera Compass IR PSD Servo motor Sonar Laser ranger
Robot sensors
Robot Platforms (6)
NXT Intelligent Brick Servo Motor
Sound Sensor Light Sensor Touch Sensor
key transponder Accelerometer Sensor Compass Sensor Ultrasonic Sensor
LEGO MINDSTORMS NXT
Stepper, AC and DC Motors
PLC and Microcontrollers
Pc Board CAN BUS
Serial/paralell
GPIB
Buses: USB
USB (Universal Serial Bus) is a new external bus developed by Intel, Compaq,
DEC, IBM, Microsoft, NEC and Northern Telcom and released to the public in
1996 with the Intel 430HX Triton II Mother Board. USB has the capability of
transferring 12 Mbps, supporting up to 127 devices and only utilizing one IRQ.
For PC computers to take advantage of USB the user must be running Windows
95 OSR2, Windows 98 or Windows 2000. Linux users also have the capability
of running USB with the proper support drivers installed.
USB cables are hot swappable which allows users to connect and disconnect the
cable while the computer is on without any physical damage to the cable.
USB Logo USB Type A & B USB mini
Buses: USB
USB VERSIONS:
USB 1.0 - The original release of USB supports 127 devices
transferring 12 Mbps.
USB 1.1 - Also known as full-speed USB, USB 1.1 is similar to the
original release of USB however minor modifications for the
hardware and the specifications. This version of USB still only
supports a rate of 12 Mbps.
USB 2.0 - USB 2.0 also known as hi-speed USB was developed by
Compaq, Hewlett Packard, Intel, Lucent, Microsoft, NEC and Philips
and was introduced in 2001. Hi-speed USB is capable of supporting a
transfer rate of up to 480 Mbps and is backwards compatible meaning
it is capable of supporting USB 1.0 and 1.1 devices and cables.
Buses: USB
USB Architecture:
Host
◦ One host per system
◦ Typically the PC in standard USB topology
◦ Can be any device in OTG
Hub
◦ Provides connecting ports, power, terminations
Device/Node (i.e. Slave)
◦ Peripheral application
Buses: USB
USB Specifications:
A unique connector
Hub topology
Auto detection and configuration
Low power
High Performance
Supports up to 127 external devices
Provides power
BW:USB 1.1: 12 Mb/s, USB 2.0: 480 Mb/s
Buses: USB
USB Topology:
• Maximum cable length of 30 meters
• Maximum of five non-root hubs
• Only a function is allowed in tier 7
• Maximum of six segments
• Hub at center of each star
• Each segment 5m max
• Tiered star
Buses: USB
USB Devices:
HUB
◦ Simplifies USB Connectivity
◦ Detect attach and detach
Functions
◦ USB devices that transmit or receive data
Buses: FireWire
By Apple
BW:
◦ 400 Mbps
◦ 800 Mbps for 1394b
◦ Can send more than a CD every 10 sec
Plug & play
Support 63 devices
Provides power
Digital audio, video, external hard drives, …
Buses: FireWire
The original FireWire was faster than USB when it came out.
Transfer rates of up to 400 Mbps.
The maximum distance between devices is 4.5 meters of
cable length.
Eventually, FireWire 800 replaced USB 2.0 very easily.
FireWire 800 had a transfer rate of up to 800 Mbps.
The maximum distance of cable length between devices is
100 meters.
Buses: FireWire
USB 1.1 12Mbps
FW 400 400 Mbps
USB 2.0 480 Mbps
FW 800 800 Mbps
USB versus FireWire
USB FireWire
On-bus power 2.5W 45W (!)
Max # devices 127 63
Topology Star Tree
Plug & Play Yes Yes
Peer-to-peer connectivity No Yes
Device Cost Low High
BUSES: GPIB
INTRODUCTION:
• In 1965, Hewlett-Packard designed the Hewlett-Packard Interface Bus ( HP-
IB ) to connect their line of programmable instruments to their computers.
Because of its high transfer rates (nominally 1 Mbytes/s), this interface bus
quickly gained popularity. It was later accepted as IEEE Standard 488-1975, and
has evolved to ANSI/IEEE Standard 488.1-1987.
•Today, the name G eneral Purpose Interface Bus (GPIB) is more widely used
than HP-IB. ANSI/IEEE 488.2-1987 strengthened the original standard by
defining precisely how controllers and instruments communicate.
•Standard Commands for Programmable Instruments (SCPI ) took the
command structures defined in IEEE 488.2 and created a single, comprehensive
programming command set that is used with any SCPI instrument. Figure 1
summarizes GPIB history.
BUSES: GPIB
GPIB can connect 15 instruments (0~31 address can be assigned)
to a PC (controller). The PC handles the transmission on the bus.
8 bits parallel transmission, up to 8 Mbits/s transmission speed.
The total cable length in a system should not exceed 20m (2m
max. between a device and next device)
Text mode commands. (Easy to differentiate)
Using three handshake line for handshaking to ensure data
transmission accuracy.
BUSES: GPIB
Oscilloscope
Function generator
GPIB
Interface
Digital multi-meter Switch
BUSES: GPIB
GPIB Connections
Linear Configuration Star Configuration
BUSES: CAN
Controller–area network (CAN or CAN-bus) is a vehicle bus
standard designed to allow microcontrollers and devices to
communicate with each other within a vehicle without a host computer.
The CAN Bus is an automotive bus developed by Robert Bosch, which
has quickly gained acceptance into the automotive and aerospace
industries. CAN is a serial bus protocol to connect individual systems
and sensors as an alternative to conventional multi-wire looms. It
allows automotive components to communicate on a single or dual-
wire networked data bus up to 1Mbps.
BUSES: CAN
In 2006, over 70% of all automobiles
sold in North America will utilize CAN
Bus technology. Beginning in 2008, the
Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE)
requires 100% of the vehicles sold in the
USA to use the CAN Bus communication
protocol while the European Union has
similar laws. Several new after market
devices have been introduced into the
market that utilize the CAN Bus protocol
but until now, there have been no new
devices that assist the aging after market
remote starter and alarm system
technology. Now there is an after market
module that offers remote starter and
alarm connectivity to the CAN Bus
communication protocol.
Engineering Software
Matlab Labview HP-VEE IDL Mathematica
Linux Qt Mathcad
Autocad PowerSHAPE PowerMILL CopyCAD
End
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