An Assembly-Oriented Design Framework for Additive Manufacturing
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Design for Additive Manufacturing
- The lack of an explicit functional analysis (FA) method.
- Too few decision-making decision support tools for easing PC.
- The deficiency of functional reasoning approaches to generate AM-enabled features.
- Too few approaches integrating manufacturing and assembly knowledge into the design stage.
2.2. Additive Manufacturing Design-Related Characteristics
2.2.1. Assembly-Related Additive Manufacturing Characteristics
- Multi-material manufacturing [28]: the capability to directly manufacture multiple material components either discretely or continuously. Processes fully capable—that is, without any hardware alteration—of this property include DMD [29], LENS [30] for the metals, and FFF [31], 3DP, and PolyJet for the polymeric materials.
- Kinematic pair printing [14]: the capability to directly manufacture assemblies with moving parts. This has been referred to as non-assembly fabrication, in situ fabrication, or assembly-free fabrication. The printing of historical Reuleaux kinematic models [32] is a great illustration of this AM capability. Table 2 shows some kinematic pairs and specific joints, which have been additively manufactured. Critical to this capability is the clearance between the moving parts and access to these clearances for uncured or support material to be removed.
- Around insert building: in some cases it is likely that groups of components are not (or cannot be) manufactured with AM (e.g., engines, batteries, etc.), but are required to be embedded into a part. Some AM processes have this capability to be paused, for a complete part to be laid on the part being manufactured, and to be resumed. This can be viewed as another route for multi-material printing. AM techniques that have been demonstrated to build around inserts include stereolithography [33], ultrasonic consolidation [34], laminated object manufacturing [35], shape deposition manufacturing [36], and PolyJet [37].
- Electronics printing: the capability to deposit electronics components (e.g., conductive inks, sensor, etc.). This ability is somewhat related to the machine capability. In various ways, these capabilities can ease a product architecture. It is the case for the example for the Voxel 8 machine [38].
2.2.2. Part-Related Characteristics
- Material type: as shown in Table 1, materials processed by AM machines include plastics, metals, ceramics, and composites. Whereas some techniques such as SLM or LENS do only process metals, techniques such as PolyJet or SLA are limited to plastics. As such, choosing a type of material is an implicit way of selecting an AM technique.
- Resolution: the features details and minimum wall thickness of a part strongly depend on the machine resolution (XY resolution and layer height or vertical resolution). Resolution varies between techniques, and for the same technique it can also be a matter of hardware.
- Maximum size: any AM technique is limited in buildable size by the machine embodying it, therefore so are the parts (or the number of parts) that can be manufactured at once. This limitation may lead to break down the CAD model to manufacture it in smaller chunks and then reassemble them afterwards [49]. The largest AM machines have built dimensions ranging from 90 × 60 × 30 cm (Merke IV) to 40 × 10 × 6 m (Windsor) and even to (theoretically) infinite dimensions. Knowing which machine will manufacture the part before designing it will definitely restrain the design space, and conversely with a rough idea of the overall dimensions of the part a proper machine may be selected.
- Surface quality: number of factors do affect part’s surface finish. Owing to the layer-wise manufacturing method peculiar to AM, stair step effect makes orientation and layer thickness very influential regarding surface finish. On a single part, many different surface finishes may be encountered, varying by a more than nine factors in terms of roughness (Ra). Nevertheless, the technique itself does also influence the surface quality. In techniques processing plastics for instance, SLA machines do provide a better surface quality than FFF ones; in metals, SLM parts have better quality than those manufactured with LENS.
3. Assembly-Oriented Design Framework for AM
- The possibility to consider parts consolidation, in order to minimize the product architecture.
- Owing to the heterogeneous nature of a product, assembly-free AM is not, generally, possible in the current state of the art. The AM of a product may involve many techniques, even in some cases other conventional manufacturing processes as well (hybrid manufacturing [50]), and a few assembly operations.
- The possibility to consider part consolidation cannot be made regardless of the specific characteristics of available AM techniques.
3.1. Overall Description
- Ensuring that the product architecture is kept to its supreme boundary by considering the available AM techniques and machines specific part consolidation capabilities.
- Determining a manufacturing plan along with any in situ (during manufacturing) or subsequent assembly operations.
- Providing critical geometric elements building the design space—such as functional interfaces and volume-envelopes—(based on the architecture and the manufacturing plan) to be used for the detail design of the parts.
3.2. Initial Product Architecture Derivation
3.2.1. Functional Analysis
3.2.2. Concept Derivation and Decomposition
- Part-to-part kinematics relationships view: all the parts are enumerated and the kinematic pair between them are specified.
- Functional flows view: components in the part-to-part relationships graph are first clustered according to the basic functions they fulfil, and then the corresponding flows are routed from the EEs through the components. Some flows may have to be split, while others may be required to merge. Spatial relationships view: using the mereotopological primitives descriptors to describe the physical connections between spatial regions (denoted x and y) such as developed in Demoly et al. [52] as “x is part of y”, “x is internal part of y”(IP), “x is tangent of y”, and “x overlaps y”. Such descriptors provide complimentary information on relationships between non-relatively moving parts specified.
3.2.3. Specific (Technical) Requirements
- For the parts themselves: indication of whether the component will be outsourced or is not to be additively manufactured (e.g., battery, engine, bearings, etc.), indication of whether the component would need to be maintained (in case of a weary component) or often moved, characteristics for AM techniques/machines selection.
- For the part-to-part relationships: kinematic pairs, spatial relationships, and flows.
3.3. AM Context Definition at Product Level
- Determining an architecture with the least components based on the available AM techniques’ capabilities.
- Maintaining functionality regardless of how parts have been combined.
- Determining a manufacturing plan (including assembly operations) so that the detailed design stage is made accordingly, abiding by the selected processes’ constraints. Another rationale underpinning this goal is that, those components that are to be manufactured together (be them moving relatively to each other or not) must be designed together (or at least with the same awareness of how manufacturing will occur), since manufacturing direction will be the same for them.
3.3.1. Preliminary Processes Selection and Manufacturing Plan Generation
- Materials and techniques selection for each part individually based on the specific requirements stated for each of them. This is where research work from Ghazy [53] on a decision support system has been harnessed to our contribution.
- Techniques selection for the whole assembly. Each of the part to be additively manufactured is likely to be manufacturable by more than one AM material-technique combinations. This substep is, basically, intended to determine the combinations that will suit most of the parts, as a way to streamline the manufacturing of the whole assembly.
3.3.2. Architecture Minimization between Mating Components
- Components without relative motion are first clustered within sub-assemblies.
- Consolidation is made by components pairs comparisons in each sub-assembly. The components are subsequently denoted by x and y. Four cases can then occur, as regards manufacturing and materials requirements:
- -
- Case 1: components are of the same material and are manufactured by the same AM technique (AM(x) = AM(y) and M(x) = M(y)). In such case, they are simply merged as a single component and their respective functional flows are combined.
- -
- Case 2: components are of different materials processed by the same technique (AM(x) = AM(y) and M(x) M(y)). In that case, they are also merged and flows are combined.
- -
- Case 3: components are of different materials processed by different techniques (AM(x) AM(y) and M(x) M(y)). In this case, spatial relationships between the components (read from the architecture spatial relationships view) along with the abilities of the two techniques of building around insert are used to make a decision as shown in Figure 5. The two parts are either tangent or overlapping at some region. In case they are tangent, they are simply manufactured separately and regularly assembled (requiring therefore assembly features for a rigid kinematic pair). If they are overlapping, let us denote 2, the outermost component in the regions where the parts are overlapping. If the technique manufacturing 2 is capable of building around insert, then 1 and 2 are assembled in such a way that 1 is embedded in 2, while this latter is being manufactured, otherwise they must be regularly assembled, that is, manufactured separately and assembled afterwards.
- -
- Case 4: one of the components is outsourced or non-additively manufacturable. We assume that two adjacent outsourced components are considered as a single outsourced component, the case where both compared components are outsourced is thus excluded. In case the parts are overlapping and the outermost component is the outsourced one, then the parts are regularly assembled. Otherwise, the outcome is the same as for Case 3.
3.3.3. Architecture Minimization between Moving Components
- A and B are manufacturable by the same technique. If kinematics pair J is also manufacturable by the technique, then the whole assembly is consolidated during manufacturing. Otherwise—that is, if the kinematics pair is not manufacturable—the components are assembled afterwards and assembly features must be integrated in their designs.
- A and B are not manufacturable by the same technique (or one of the parts is not an AM part). In that case, they are assembled normally.
3.4. AM Constrained Part Design
3.4.1. The Case of Mechanisms to Be Manufactured by the Same Process, in a Single Print Job
- Product architecture 3D laying out: the design space of each part is defined and accordingly positioned.
- Functional interfaces definition: based on the part-to-part kinematics relationships, the design spaces are updated with the proper functional interfaces (FIs).
- AM contextualization: a step that consists in setting clearances between FIs, choosing a printing configuration, choosing a printing orientation, and allowing access to the clearances.
- Components’ geometries designs.
3.4.2. Foundations of Our Strategy for Harnessing AM Shape Complexity to Part’s Performance
3.4.3. The Proposed Methodology for Part-Oriented DFAM
- Choice of each parameters bounds.
- Specification of any constraint on the parameters. These can be geometric constraints such as relationships between parameters, or constraints ensuring a proper behavior such as maximum stress or minimal natural frequency. The functional flows conveyed by the part on one hand, and the chosen material on the other hand can provide indication on what constraints related to an appropriate behavior must be met.
- Definition of the component’s mass as an objective function. Choosing the component’s mass as an objective function to minimize is consistent with the endeavor to design components with the bare minimum matter. Other objective functions that are sensitive to the chosen parameters and that are relevant to the sought performance may also be chosen.
4. Case Study
4.1. Initial Architecture Derivation
4.2. Minimized Architecture and Manufacturing Plan
4.3. Final Design
5. Conclusions and Future Work
- AM materials description. There must be a way to describe materials (be they proprietary or generic) that is consistent with all the existing machines. Some materials may have nearly the same properties, but with quite different names. Some machine manufacturers may call their material with a generic name like ABS, PLA; such names should be made more explicit. Indeed, ABS for an Ultimaker FFF machine may not have the same properties as ABS extruded from a Stratasys FDM (fused deposition modeling) machine.
- Cost as a selection criterion. Criteria such as cost could be included in the preliminary machines selection. Indeed, the approach led to cases where the main selected AM machine and material combination was actually the most expensive one, while there are other available cheaper AM machines that could also seamlessly manufacture the assembly with the prescribed parts’ requirements.
- An indicator of viability of AM of assembly. In case many of the components are outsourced, operations such as assembly during AM may dramatically increase the production time. There should therefore be an indicator that quickly checks the architecture and the parts’ requirements and tells how valuable it can be to consider the product for AM.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Machine | AM Technique | Min Wall Thickness | Accuracy | Surface Finish | Max Dimensions (mm) | Material Type | Processed Materials | Multi-Material | Capability to Print Electronics | Capability to Build around Insert |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ultimaker 3 Extended | FDM | Very thin | Average | Good-average | 197 × 215 × 300 | Polymers | Nylon, PLA, ABS, CPE, CPE+, PVA, PC, TPU 95A, PP, Breakaway | Yes | No | Yes |
Ultimaker 2+ | FDM | Very thin | Average | Good-average | 223 × 233 × 205 | Polymers | PLA, ABS, CPE, CPE+, PC, Nylon, TPU 95A, PP | No | No | Yes |
Objet30 | PolyJet | Very thin | Tight | Excellent | 294 × 192 × 149 | Polymers; Wax | VeroWhitePlus™, VeroGray™, VeroBlue™, VeroBlack™, Durus | Yes | No | No |
Form 2 | SLA | Very thin | Tight | Excellent | 145 × 145 × 175 | Polymers | CLEAR FLGPCL03, HIGH TEMP FLHTAM01, TOUGH FLTOTL03, DURABLE FLDUCL01, FLEXIBLE FLFLGR02, DENTAL SG FLDGOR01, CASTABLE FLCABL02 | No | No | No |
EOS P 77 | SLS | Very thin | Tight | Good-average | 700 × 380 × 580 | Polymers | Alumide, PA 1101, PA 1102 black, PA 2200, PA 2201, PA 3200 GF, PrimeCast 101, PrimePart FR (PA 2241 FR), | No | No | No |
FORMIGA P 110 | SLS | Very thin | Tight | Good-average | 200 × 250 × 330 | Polymers | PA 2200, PA 2201, PA 3200 GF, PrimeCast 101, PA 2105 | No | No | No |
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Family Process | Description | Typical Processed Material | Typical Technique |
---|---|---|---|
Material extrusion | A material is semi-solid state is extruded through a nozzle/needle and is cured. | Polymers, ceramics, metals, wood | Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF), Robocasting (Direct Ink Writing), |
Powder bed fusion | A thermal source selectively fuses layers of powder. | Polymers, ceramics, metals | Selective Laser Sintering (SLS), Selective Laser Melting (SLM) |
Photopolymerization | Layers of photopolymers are selectively cured upon exposure to a radiation. | Photocurable polymers | Sterelithography (SLA) |
Directed energy deposition | A focused high power laser beam melts a material powder as it is being deposited. | Metals | Laser Engineered Net Shaping (LENS), Direct Metal Deposition (DMD), 3D laser cladding |
Sheet lamination | Material sheets are bonded; each sheet (representing a cross section of the CAD model) is selectively cut with an energy source. | Papers, metals, polymers | Laminated Object Manufacturing (LOM), Ultrasonic Consolidation (UC) |
Material jetting | Droplets of a material (or a mix of two materials) are selectively deposited in thin layers from a print head, and cured either by a source of energy or by environmental conditions. | Polymers, wax | Multi-Jet Modeling (Drop-On-Demand), PolyJet™ |
Binder jetting | A binder is selectively deposited, from a printhead, onto a powder bed, forming a section of the CAD model. | Plastics, metals, composites, ceramics, polymers | 3D printing |
Type | SLA | SLS | FFF | SLM | PolyJet |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Revolute | [39,40,41] | [39,40] | [42,43] | [44,45,46] | [47,48] |
Prismatic | [40] | [40] | |||
Cylindrical | [45] | ||||
Spherical | [39,40] | [39,40] | |||
Gear | [44] | [48] | |||
Universal joint | [40] | [40] | [46] | [47] |
ID | Part Name | AM | Material Class | Surface Finish | Min Wall Thickness | Accuracy Level | Dimensions (mm) | Mechanical Properties | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Yield Strength | Durometer | ||||||||
1 | Main body | Yes | Plastics | Average-rough | Thin-average | Average | 100 × 150 × 30 | 10–20 MPa | Shore D 60–70 |
2 | Trigger | Yes | Plastics | Average-rough | Thin-average | Average | 40 × 90 × 30 | 10–20 MPa | Shore D 60–70 |
3 | Bar | No | |||||||
4 | Tail stock | Yes | Plastics | Average-rough | Thin-average | Average | 50 × 50 × 30 | 10–20 MPa | Shore D 60–70 |
5 | Lock | Yes | Plastics | Average-rough | Thin-average | Loose | |||
6 | Pad1 | Yes | Plastics | Good-average | Thin-average | Loose | Shore A 40–100 | ||
7 | Pad2 | Yes | Plastics | Good-average | Thin-average | Loose | Shore A 40–100 | ||
8 | Roll pin | Yes | Plastics, metals | Average-rough | Average | ||||
9 | Knurled pin | Yes | Plastics, metals | Average-rough | Average | ||||
10 | Release trigger spring1 | No | |||||||
11 | Release trigger spring2 | No | |||||||
12 | Release trigger | Yes | Plastics, metals | Average-rough | Thin-average | Average | 10–20 MPa | Shore D 60–70 | |
13 | Power spring | No | |||||||
14 | Jam plates1 | Yes | Plastics, metals | Average-rough | Thin-average | Average | 10–20 MPa | Shore D 60–70 | |
15 | Jam plates2 | Yes | Plastics, metals | Average-rough | Thin-average | Average | 10–20 MPa | Shore D 60–70 | |
16 | Split pins1 | No | |||||||
17 | Split pins2 | No |
Operation | Part or Sub-Assembly | Machine-Material | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 4-5-8-9 14-15 1-2-12 | Ultimaker 3 Extended—PLA | (1, 2, 5) in situ assembly In situ assembly for 1-2 and 1-12 |
2 | 6, 7 | Ultimaker 3 Extended—TPU-95A | Regular assembly after AM |
3 | 3, 16, 17 | (not AM) | Regular assembly to (4-5-8-9) |
4 | 10, 11, 13 | (not AM) | Regular assembly to (1-2-12) and 3 |
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Sossou, G.; Demoly, F.; Gomes, S.; Montavon, G. An Assembly-Oriented Design Framework for Additive Manufacturing. Designs 2022, 6, 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/designs6010020
Sossou G, Demoly F, Gomes S, Montavon G. An Assembly-Oriented Design Framework for Additive Manufacturing. Designs. 2022; 6(1):20. https://doi.org/10.3390/designs6010020
Chicago/Turabian StyleSossou, Germain, Frédéric Demoly, Samuel Gomes, and Ghislain Montavon. 2022. "An Assembly-Oriented Design Framework for Additive Manufacturing" Designs 6, no. 1: 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/designs6010020
APA StyleSossou, G., Demoly, F., Gomes, S., & Montavon, G. (2022). An Assembly-Oriented Design Framework for Additive Manufacturing. Designs, 6(1), 20. https://doi.org/10.3390/designs6010020