I was not aware that robotic meat cutting is well on the
way to been realized. This is excellent news as it will end the rush
to the bottom in terms of industry employment. The industry will
then segregate into quality cutting and factory cutting and separate
price structures which has already happened but has nor been
acknowledged.
It will not be just chickens either, but all parts of
the meat industry.
It is reasonable that this technology will quickly
evolve into an all purpose piece of automated hardware that simply
takes up a carcass and swiftly processes it. The three components
apply right across the whole spectrum and it becomes a matter of
programming and correct scale.
In time it could become cheap enough that it can become
part of small operation able to support local farms.
GTRI develops
prototype chicken-deboning robot
By David Szondy
18:40 June 10, 2012
Gary McMurray, chief
of GTRI's Food Processing Technology Division, with the Intelligent
Cutting and Deboning System
Chickens have another
reason to lose sleep thanks to roboticists at the Georgia Tech
Research Institute’s (GTRI) Intelligent Cutting and Deboning
System. Using 3D imaging technology, this robot can debone an entire
chicken with the skill of a human butcher and has the potential of
saving the poultry industry millions of dollars by reducing costs and
waste.
Chickens are big
business. In the United States alone 8.7 billion chickens are
processed every year. That’s 36 billion pounds (16 billion kg) of
poultry of which the average American consumes 50 pounds (23 kg). On
such a scale, costs due to inefficient processing and the need for
skilled labor adds up very quickly. Over the years, the meat industry
have managed to automate many tasks so that, for example, making
bacon is now a largely hands-off affair, but chickens are very
irregularly and individually shaped, so automation has passed them
by, until now.
Robots have made a
number of inroads into the meat processing industry as part of this
push towards automation. A Japanese company has recently developed a
robot that uses an x-ray scanner to help it debone hams and another
robot cleanly removes chicken breasts at a rate of thousands per day,
but the GTRI team is using a robot to automate the entire chicken
deboning process.
The GTRI robot, called
the “Intelligent Cutting and Deboning System,” uses a 3D vision
system that operates on the fact that the internal structure of a
chicken corresponds closely to its outer appearance. So far so good,
but chickens vary a lot from one another, so something more
sophisticated is needed.
"Each bird is
unique in its size and shape, so we have developed the sensing and
actuation needed to allow an automated deboning system to adapt to
the individual bird, as opposed to forcing the bird to conform to the
machine," says Gary McMurray, chief of GTRI's Food Processing
Technology Division.
What this means in
practice is that the robot visually seeks out fixed landmarks on the
chicken and uses these as part of an algorithm that estimates the
internal structure of the chicken and plans the cuts. These cuts are
designed to be precise with the intention of maximizing the amount of
meat removed and minimizing the number of bone fragments. This is
achieved by the robot’s two arms. One is a cutting arm with two
degrees of movement and the other is a holding arm with six degrees
of movement. In concert, these arms allow the robot to position the
chicken and make the required cuts.
But this wouldn’t be
of much help without the final component. The robot can’t see
through the chicken while cutting, so it relies on a sort of
mechanical “touch” to see how things are going. The arms include
a forced-feedback system that tells the robot when it is meeting
resistance, such as a bone or tendon. If it meets a hard resistance,
it avoids this as a bone. If the resistance only slows the knife,
then it’s a tendon or ligament. With these two cues, the robot can
stay close to the bone without chipping it and by knowing when it
cuts a tendon or ligament, it can remove the meat cleanly and
completely, though this is still something of an art. "Fine
tuning is needed to adjust the force thresholds to be able to tell
the difference between meat, tendon, ligaments and bone - each of
which have different material properties,” said research engineer
Ai-Ping Hu.
The chicken-deboning
robot is still undergoing testing and development by GTRI under
funding by the state of Georgia through the Agricultural Technology
Research Program, but one day it could help keep Sunday dinner more
affordable.
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