Abstract

Improving the geometric accuracy of the deposited component is essential for the wider adoption of wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) in industries. This paper introduces an online layer-by-layer controller that operates robustly under various welding conditions to improve the deposition accuracy of the WAAM process. Two control strategies are proposed and evaluated in this work: A PID algorithm and a multi-input multi-output model-predictive control (MPC) algorithm. After each layer of deposition, the deposited geometry is measured using a laser scanner. These measurements are compared against the CAD model, and geometric errors are then compensated by the controller, which generates a new set of welding parameters for the next layer. The MPC algorithm, combined with a linear autoregressive (ARX) modelling process, updates welding parameters between successive layers by minimizing a cost function based on sequences of input variables and predicted responses. Weighting coefficients of the ARX model are trained iteratively throughout the manufacturing process. The performance of the designed control architecture is investigated through both simulation and experiments. Results show that the real-time control performance is improved by increasing the complexity of implemented control algorithm: controlled geometric fluctuations in the test component were reduced by 200% whilst maintaining fluctuations within a 3 mm limit under various welding conditions. In addition, the adaptiveness of designed control strategy is verified by accurately controlling the fabrication of a part with complex geometry.

Highlights

  • Additive manufacturing (AM) is an emerging technology in the advanced fabrication sector

  • This study aims to develop an online layer-by-layer bead geometry controller to achieve higher deposition accuracy for the Wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) process

  • An online layer-by-layer ARX model-based adaptive model-predictive control (MPC) controller was developed to improve the geometric accuracy of the WAAM process

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Summary

Introduction

Additive manufacturing (AM) is an emerging technology in the advanced fabrication sector. As a sub-category of metallic AM systems, Wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) is a wire-feed system that typically makes use of electric arc welding equipment to fabricate a component by depositing metallic consumable in a layer-by-layer fashion (Frazier, 2014). GMAW based WAAM often adopts the controlled dip transfer welding process to improve (amongst other things) process stability, deposition accuracy, and material properties, whilst reducing overall power and heat inputs (Derekar, 2018). CMT is a modified metal inert gas (MIG) welding process based on short-circuiting (dip) transfer process developed by Fronius of Austria in 2004 (Selvi et al, 2018). CMT processes allow for control of arc length and thermal input by utilizing an innovative wire feed system integrated with

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