Harri Kopola
Papers
3
Total Citations
12
H-Index
2
About
Harri Kopola is a pioneering figure in the integration of fiber-optic sensing with robotic precision assembly. His foundational research, primarily conducted in the mid-1980s, centers on developing intensity-modulated fiber optic sensors for real-time feedback control in automated manufacturing. Kopola’s most cited work, a 1987 study with 8 citations, introduced fiber optic reflectance sensors mounted directly on a SCARA robot gripper. This innovation enabled the precise measurement of gripper finger position, distance to components, edges, orientation, and pin images during electronic component insertion—a critical challenge in early automation. His 1986 contributions further advanced robot dynamic sensing and the use of laser diodes with position-sensitive detectors to determine mechanical misalignments in Cartesian coordinate robots, offering a practical method for off-line compensation of positioning errors. Though his citation counts are modest, Kopola’s work was instrumental in bridging the gap between optical sensor technology and industrial robotics, laying groundwork for modern sensor-guided assembly systems. His research remains a valuable reference for engineers exploring fiber-optic solutions in precision manufacturing and robotic feedback control.
Research Focus
Key Achievements
Top Papers
- 1
- 2Robot Dynamic Sensing Based on Fiber-Optic Sensors2 citations · 1986
- 3