Cleanroom Automation
The EMC Robot Line consists of fully autonomous environmental monitoring solutions tailored for cleanrooms. Designed to reduce human intervention while improving sampling consistency, compliance, and efficiency. Includes solutions for viable and non-viable particle monitoring, microbial detection, and cleanroom disinfection.
Environmental Monitoring and Control Robot Base
FAQ
Discover how our fully autonomous environmental monitoring robots are transforming cleanroom operations. Designed to minimize human intervention, the EMC robots enhance consistency, compliance, and efficiency across viable and non-viable particle monitoring, microbial detection, and cleanroom disinfection. Find answers to the most common questions below.
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Can the EMC Robot system work without a network in the workplace?
EMC Robot system carries its own network that can perform navigation, positioning and environmental detection and control. Devices control and data reading can be performed by connecting to the network of the EMC Robot system. The EMC Robot system can also access the customer's existing network, send the sampled data to the designated server with the form requested by the customer, and remotely control the EMC system.
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How does the EMC Robot system avoid obstacles and ensure accurate positioning?
EMC Robot system uses high-precision TOF lidar for mapping and navigation, depth camera for stereoscopic obstacle avoidance, and ultrasonic radar to avoid high transmittance and reflective materials. It fulfills obstacle avoidance in all situations that may exist in the working environment. The EMC Robot system is equipped with a high-precision IMU sensor and inertial navigation. It is aided by the characteristic comparison of laser signals. Achieve accurate arrival of sites. Limited by the performance of the sensor, the system cannot recognize and avoid thin lines with a diameter of less than 20 mm. But in a realistic work environment, such a thin hanging line should not appear.
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How long does the EMC Robot system last on a single charge, and how much air is sampled?
The full charge of the EMC Robot system is 624Wh, and the actual working time needs to consider the power consumption of the function modules on board. For example, the aerosol particle counter module equipped with 100PLM consumes 50W of power in the chassis and 25W in the function module. The average power consumption in actual operation is about 60W, which can work for 8.5 hours when 20% of the power is retained for the back pile charging, and the sampling amount is also affected by the distance of each site and the sampling scheme. Rough estimate: At full power, a particle counter equipped with 100LPM can complete at least 50,000L of air sampling at a time. For the clean environment of ISO14644 class 7, it is possible to complete the sampling of a single clean room of 18500 square meters (1000L per site, sampling 50 sites).