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Unilever gets a boost from Robotics

Quick-change versatility and a boost in throughput are two of the benefits gained since a four-robot packaging cell was installed at this Unilever meat plant in Germany.

Pw 8745 Bifi Robot

Seasonal promotions and other marketing initiatives designed to last briefly and change frequently are becoming increasingly important in the fast-moving world of consumer packaged goods. Consumers, too, want ever more variety in the size, shape, and flavor of the products they buy. That means today’s packaging lines must be more versatile than ever, and more often than not they’re gaining that versatility through robotics.

A perfect example can be found at the Unilever plant in Ansbach, Germany, where the popular sausage snack known as Bifi is produced. The recent installation of four delta-style flex-picker robots from ABB (www.abb.com) lets Unilever go from handling one size sausage to another in about three minutes. It also lets Unilever redeploy as many as six operators who used to be required for hand packing of the sausages into thermoformed rollstock. And while the previously manual operation could only feed the downstream thermoform/seal system at 8 cycles/min, that machine now runs routinely at 15 cycles/min because the upstream robotic packaging cell is comfortable at that pace.

In operation since March, 2006, this is the second robotic packaging cell installed at the Ansbach plant. The first uses five delta-style robots to handle about 360 sausages/min. By comparison, the newest cell uses four robots instead of five and handles nearly 600 sausages/min. Permitting this surge in throughput and efficiency are improvements in both hardware and software. On the hardware side, the end effector on each robot is a triple-gripper. Each time it carries sausages to a thermoformed package, it does so three at a time.

Also notable is that only minor mechanical adjustments are required when Unilever changes to any of six sausage diameters. New parameters are chosen at a touchscreen and the pneumatically actuated mechanical grippers pretty much ready themselves for a new sausage diameter.

Nimble and sure-handed, the end-effectors were designed and built by Schunk (www.schunk.com) in collaboration with robomotion (www.robomotion.de), a specialist in robotics. Robomotion also had integration responsibilities on the robotic installation. One of robomotion’s key accomplishments was keeping the footprint of the robotic cell to a mere 2.5 x 3.5 m (8.20’ x 11.48’). Software played a key role in making this possible because it minimizes the distance that the robotic end effectors must travel. More on this later.

From cutting to packaging

Individual units of the sausage product are cut from long strings in a room adjacent to the packaging room. Their ultimate goal is to make their way into the thermoformed cavities produced in a multilayer forming web by an R530 system from Multivac (www.multivac.com).
This system forms, evacuates, and backflushes the packs before heat sealing lidding material into place.

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