- Docente: Marco Troncossi
- Credits: 6
- SSD: ING-IND/13
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Forli
- Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Mechanical Engineering (cod. 8771)
Learning outcomes
Students acquire the necessary tools to perform a functional analysis -aimed at designing purposes- of automatic machines and robots. In particular, students gain skills both from the theoretical viewpoint (kinematic, static and dynamic analyses of complex mechanisms) and from the practical one (kinetostatic simulations of planarand spatialmechanisms by menas ofmultibodysoftware).
Course contents
1. INTRODUCTION TO AUTOMATION AND INDUSTRIAL ROBOTICS. (5 hours)
2. COORDINATE TRANSFORMATION MATRICES. (8 hours)
3. ROBOT KINEMATICS. (15 hours)
4. ROBOT STATICS. (1 hour)
5. ROBOT DYNAMICS. (13 hours)
6. TRAJECTORY PLANNING. (1 hour)
7. SIMULATIONS WITH MULTIBODY SOFTWARE. (6 hours)
PROBLEMS AND APPLICATIONS (9 hours)
Readings/Bibliography
Reference book
- Legnani G., Fassi I., Robotica industriale: modellazione, pianificazione, controllo, programmazione, componentistica, normativa e sicurezza. CittàStudi Edizioni, Torino, 2019
Suggested books
- Siciliano B., Sciavicco L., Villani L., Oriolo G. Robotica:modellistica, pianificazione e controllo – 3° ed., McGraw-Hill, Milano, 2008 [oppure: Sciavicco L. Siciliano B., Robotica industriale: modellistica e controllo di manipolatori – 2° ed., McGraw-Hill, Milano, 2000]
- Siciliano & Khatib eds., Handbook of Robotics, Springer, New York, 2008
In-depth readings
- Cheli F., Pennestrì E., Cinematica e Dinamica dei Sistemi Multibody, Casa Editrice Ambrosiana, Milano, 2006
- Angeles J., Fundamental of robotic mechanical systems , Springer-Verlag, New York, seconda edizione 2003
- Tsai L.W., Robot analysis: the mechanics of serial and parallel manipulators, John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1999
- Craig J.J., Introduction to Robotics: Mechanics and Control , Addison Wesley, Boston (MA, USA), 1989
- Paul R., Robot Manipulator: Mathematics, Programming and Control , MIT Press, Cambridge (MA, USA), 1981
Teaching methods
Lessons taught in lecture room and in informatic lab. Connection in videostreaming is available for students attending the lessons remotely.
Assessment methods
Written examination: 2 questions about theoretical aspects or exercize. Discussion of the multibody model developed by each student with the software ADAMS.
Optional oral examination for a score variation of 2-3 points at most.Teaching tools
Slides are used as a partial support for the lesson presetations. The corresponding Pdf files and the course lecture notes are available at https://iol.unibo.it
Links to further information
http://www.unibo.it/docenti/marco.troncossi
Office hours
See the website of Marco Troncossi
SDGs


This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.