torch speed
Robotic Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing with Variable Height Layers
Marcotte, John, Mishra, Sandipan, Wen, John T.
--Robotic wire arc additive manufacturing has been widely adopted due to its high deposition rates and large print volume relative to other metal additive manufacturing processes. For complex geometries, printing with variable height within layers offers the advantage of producing overhangs without the need for support material or geometric decomposition. This approach has been demonstrated for steel using precomputed robot speed profiles to achieve consistent geometric quality. In contrast, aluminum exhibits a bead geometry that is tightly coupled to the temperature of the previous layer, resulting in significant changes to the height of the deposited material at different points in the part. This paper presents a closed-loop approach to correcting for variations in the height of the deposited material between layers. We use an IR camera mounted on a separate robot to track the welding flame and estimate the height of deposited material. The robot velocity profile is then updated to account for the error in the previous layer and the nominal planned height profile while factoring in process and system constraints. Implementation of this framework showed significant improvement over the open-loop case and demonstrated robustness to inaccurate model parameters.
- Machinery > Industrial Machinery (1.00)
- Energy > Oil & Gas > Upstream (0.36)
Multi-Robot Scan-n-Print for Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing
Lu, Chen-Lung, He, Honglu, Ren, Jinhan, Dhar, Joni, Saunders, Glenn, Julius, Agung, Samuel, Johnson, Wen, John T.
Robotic Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing (WAAM) is a metal additive manufacturing technology, offering flexible 3D printing while ensuring high quality near-net-shape final parts. However, WAAM also suffers from geometric imprecision, especially for low-melting-point metal such as aluminum alloys. In this paper, we present a multi-robot framework for WAAM process monitoring and control. We consider a three-robot setup: a 6-dof welding robot, a 2-dof trunnion platform, and a 6-dof sensing robot with a wrist-mounted laser line scanner measuring the printed part height profile. The welding parameters, including the wire feed rate, are held constant based on the materials used, so the control input is the robot path speed. The measured output is the part height profile. The planning phase decomposes the target shape into slices of uniform height. During runtime, the sensing robot scans each printed layer, and the robot path speed for the next layer is adjusted based on the deviation from the desired profile. The adjustment is based on an identified model correlating the path speed to change in height. The control architecture coordinates the synchronous motion and data acquisition between all robots and sensors. Using a three-robot WAAM testbed, we demonstrate significant improvements of the closed loop scan-n-print approach over the current open loop result on both a flat wall and a more complex turbine blade shape.
- North America > United States > New York > Rensselaer County > Troy (0.06)
- Oceania > New Zealand > North Island > Auckland Region > Auckland (0.04)
- Europe > United Kingdom > England > Greater London > London (0.04)
- (3 more...)
Vision-based Oxy-fuel Torch Control for Robotic Metal Cutting
Akl, James, Patil, Yash, Todankar, Chinmay, Calli, Berk
The automation of key processes in metal cutting would substantially benefit many industries such as manufacturing and metal recycling. We present a vision-based control scheme for automated metal cutting with oxy-fuel torches, an established cutting medium in industry. The system consists of a robot equipped with a cutting torch and an eye-in-hand camera observing the scene behind a tinted visor. We develop a vision-based control algorithm to servo the torch's motion by visually observing its effects on the metal surface. As such, the vision system processes the metal surface's heat pool and computes its associated features, specifically pool convexity and intensity, which are then used for control. The operating conditions of the control problem are defined within which the stability is proven. In addition, metal cutting experiments are performed using a physical 1-DOF robot and oxy-fuel cutting equipment. Our results demonstrate the successful cutting of metal plates across three different plate thicknesses, relying purely on visual information without a priori knowledge of the thicknesses.
- Materials > Metals & Mining (1.00)
- Energy > Oil & Gas > Upstream (0.83)