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Sedin 1525 Double Column Vertical Borer Model
Sedin 1525 Double Column Vertical Borer Model
Table 2240mm dia complete with 4 jaws
Speeds 1.6 – 8
Sedin 1525 Double Column Vertical Borer Model Table 2240mm dia complete with 4 jaws Speeds 1.6 – 8...

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Fanuc cobot ‘eases the pain’ for pharmaceutical company

Posted on 11 Feb 2025. Edited by: Tony Miles. Read 932 times.
Fanuc cobot ‘eases the  pain’ for pharmaceutical companyThe cobot solution is alleviating health and safety issues by working collaboratively with human employees to pack and stack packets of tablets onto pallets

A cobot solution from Fanuc and system integrator SKDK is alleviating health and safety issues at a German pharmaceutical manufacturing facility by working collaboratively with staff to pack and stack packets of tablets onto pallets. Prior to the cobot’s installation, workers at the Takeda Pharmaceutical Company in Oranienburg were physically moving loads totalling 5.8 tonnes per shift, resulting in numerous days lost to sickness. Since the introduction of the Fanuc CR-15iA, productivity has improved considerably, with the collaborative robot (cobot) working 24/7 while meeting all health and safety requirements.

Japanese bio-pharmaceutical pioneer Takeda Pharmaceutical Company has a presence in over 80 regions. As a key part of its global production network, its drug manufacturing facility in Oranienburg produces more than six billion tablets and capsules each year. This significant number of drugs is required to be order picked at the end of each production line and placed onto pallets ready for shipment — back-breaking work averaging a weight of 5.8 tonnes per shift, from which the company was keen to relieve its workers.

But while Takeda sought to delegate the heavy lifting to a robot counterpart, it also wanted to ensure its workforce did not feel that their roles would be threatened by an automated alternative. Takeda project manager Robert Gundlach, who knew from experience in other projects that success depends on acceptance by staff, explained: “We involved the workers as early and intensively as possible.”

For the people based on the assembly line, this meant more informational events across shifts, in which the technology and planned implementation were explained in detail. “It was made clear to people that a rcobot is nothing more than a stepping stone to make work easier. We sold the cobots as new colleagues, not as new technology.”

A big plus for the CR-15iA in this regard, is the fact that it does not need to be ‘hidden’ behind a fence. Without the need for a cage, workers’ reservations were reduced. Sebastian Steinbach, who supported the project on site for Fanuc, added: “Staff can go within touching distance of our cobots which made the introduction of new technology more readily acceptable.”

Takeda’s human employees now successfully work side-by-side with their cobot colleague, letting it take the physical strain of their role. Small glass bottles filled with tablets are packaged in multiple cartons, which are moved to the packing table by two workers, five packs at a time, and set in a box. The cobot scans the label, then grabs the box from the conveyor belt and stacks it onto the shipping pallet with the label facing outwards, in a configuration of eight boxes per layer and four layers high. With a reach of 1,441mm and a maximum load capacity of 15kg, the cobot fulfills this task effortlessly, working 24/7 — around 8,000 packages have already been processed since its installation, and the system has run without a hitch.

Of course, hygiene is also a key factor in any purchasing decision for a pharmaceutical company, and to this end, the Fanuc CR-15iA more than meets this demand. Its extra smooth surfaces help to minimise dust and dirt build up, and with IP67-protection on its arm and wrist axis, it is well-suited for environments where the highest standards of hygiene are required.

The success of this cobot cell, installed by Berlin-based system integrator and Fanuc partner SKDK, is now serving as a template for all packing stations in the facility and has inspired other Takeda sites to consider the use of cobots, too. Mr Gundlach concluded: “There is already a wish-list for further cobot projects.”