To generate accurate movement along the 5th robot axis, the motion plastics specialist igus has developed new types of strain wave gears based on its tribo-polymer technology.
They are not only extremely compact and light but also require very little maintenance and have an especially long service life.
Tribo-polymers are used wherever the goal is an improvement of technical performance and a simultaneous reduction of costs.
The advantages of tribo-polymers are especially apparent in the case of gearboxes: due to the use of iglidur high-performance polymers, igus strain wave gears from Treotham require no additional lubrication, in contrast to metal types of gear.
Friction and wear are improved if lubrication-free tribo-polymers are used. At the same time, the use of plastics enables an extremely compact design and cost-effective manufacture. As a result of active research and further development of the strain wave gear, operating smoothness, backlash and service life have been optimised further by means of improvements in the technical design and in the selection of materials. This especially applies to the latest generation.
Flexibility and wear resistance
The main components of the gearbox include a wave generator and a flexible ring with outer drive teeth, as well as an outer ring, fixed in place in the housing and a rotary power take-off element with inner drive teeth. The necessary flexibility and high degree of wear resistance are achieved through the use of lubrication-free high-performance igus polymers.
The wave generator has an elliptical shape, therefore the surrounding flexible ring also assumes this shape. The drive teeth of the flexible ring engage at two places in the inner drive teeth of the outer ring and power take-off element.
As the outer ring has two teeth more than the other components, the flexible ring is only moved two teeth further per rotation when the wave generator is rotated. Along the last axis of an articulated arm, linear robot or delta robot, the strain wave gear can be used before different gripper systems.
Here, it performs the task of gripping objects that are not rotationally symmetrical and positioning them exactly. The current version is based on the installation size Nema 17 for direct connection to a stepper motor and can easily be adapted to other types of motor. The load bearing capacity of the strain wave gear has been determined in the test laboratory.
With a transmission ratio of 28:1, the gearbox has a service life of 1 million cycles under a load of 1.5Nm and at a speed of 6rpm. As a next step, there are plans to develop a size Nema 23 gearbox.
Cost-effective automation solutions now possible
Like igus worm gears and planetary gears, strain wave gears are also part of the igus Low Cost Automation product range. These products can be used to develop cost-effective and long-lasting automation solutions for small and medium-sized enterprises – such as robots that can dispense coffee in the retail trade, perform pick-and-place tasks in the electronics industry or, in future, empty a dishwasher in the home.
And all this is possible at a very favourable price, due mainly to the use of plastics, whereby the investment often pays for itself within just a few months.
Last year, igus worked with partners to start the platform RBTX.com, which makes it easy to put together additional components such as gripper, control system or pneumatic components in order to create a full robotics solution.
The platform brings users and suppliers of low-cost robotics components together quickly and easily. Interested parties can put together a low-cost robotics solution that matches their requirements and their budget exactly.
The latest generation igus strain wave gears are available in Australia from Treotham Automation.
Treotham Automation Pty Ltd
1300 65 75 64