Automated Process Planning for Hybrid Manufacturing
Behandish, Morad, Nelaturi, Saigopal, de Kleer, Johan
–arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
Hybrid manufacturing (HM) technologies combine additive and subtractive manufacturing (AM/SM) capabilities, leveraging AM's strengths in fabricating complex geometries and SM's precision and quality to produce finished parts. We present a systematic approach to automated computer-aided process planning (CAPP) for HM that can identify nontrivial, qualitatively distinct, and cost-optimal combinations of AM/SM modalities. A multimodal HM process plan is represented by a finite Boolean expression of AM and SM manufacturing primitives, such that the expression evaluates to an'as-manufactured' artifact. We show that primitives that respect spatial constraints such as accessibility and collision avoidance may be constructed by solving inverse configuration space problems on the'as-designed' artifact and manufacturing instruments. The primitives generate a finite Boolean algebra (FBA) that enumerates the entire search space for planning. The FBA's canonical intersection terms (i.e., 'atoms') provide the complete domain decomposition to reframe manufacturability analysis and process planning into purely symbolic reasoning, once a subcollection of atoms is found to be interchangeable with the design target. We demonstrate the practical potency of our framework and its computational efficiency when applied to process planning of complex 3D parts with dramatically different AM and SM instruments. Keywords: 1. Introduction Hybrid Manufacturing, Process Planning, Spatial Reasoning, Additive Manufacturing, Machining Hybrid manufacturing (HM), combining the capabilities of additive and subtractive manufacturing, is the new frontier of part fabrication. While additive manufacturing (AM) continues to enable unprecedented levels of structural complexity and customization, subtractive manufacturing (SM) remains indispensable for producing highprecision, mission-critical, and reliable mechanical components with functional interfaces. Versatile'multitasking' machines with simultaneous high-axis computer numerical control (CNC) of multiple AM and SM instruments (e.g., deposition heads and cutting tools) keep emerging on the market, enabling efficient use-cases for fabrication and repair (reviewed in Section 1.1).
arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence
May-17-2018
- Country:
- North America > United States
- Texas (0.04)
- Connecticut (0.04)
- California > Santa Clara County
- Palo Alto (0.04)
- North America > United States
- Genre:
- Research Report (0.64)
- Industry:
- Technology: