Abstract

For better designing manufacturing processes, surrogate models were widely considered in the past, where the effect of different material and process parameters was considered from the use of a parametric solution. The last contains the solution of the model describing the system under study, for any choice of the selected parameters. These surrogate models, also known as meta-models, virtual charts or computational vademecum, in the context of model order reduction, were successfully employed in a variety of industrial applications. However, they remain confronted to a major difficulty when the number of parameters grows exponentially. Thus, processes involving trajectories or sequencing entail a combinatorial exposition (curse of dimensionality) not only due to the number of possible combinations, but due to the number of parameters needed to describe the process. The present paper proposes a promising route for circumventing, or at least alleviating that difficulty. The proposed technique consists of a parametric transfer function that, as soon as it is learned, allows for, from a given state, inferring the new state after the application of a unitary operation, defined as a step in the sequenced process. Thus, any sequencing can be evaluated almost in real time by chaining that unitary transfer function, whose output becomes the input of the next operation. The benefits and potential of such a technique are illustrated on a problem of industrial relevance, the one concerning the induced deformation on a structural part when printing on it a series of stiffeners.

Highlights

  • When joining one flexible part to another with several screw holes, it is not uncommon to end with some screws that do not enter in their hole. This can be due to some tolerance issue, but it can be due to the deformation of the part induced by the residual stresses due to the stresses applied by the previous operations

  • We propose a methodology that allows for alleviating that difficulty, where, more than looking for representing the effect of any possible sequence, we look for describing the effect of a unitary operation on the thermomechanical state resulting from the previous unitary operation

  • We succeeded to accomplish that challenge by combining different ideas and methodologies, whose performances were proven in a case study of industrial relevance, in particular:

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Summary

Introduction

When joining one flexible part to another with several screw holes, it is not uncommon to end with some screws that do not enter in their hole This can be due to some tolerance issue, but it can be due to the deformation of the part induced by the residual stresses due to the stresses applied by the previous operations. This example from everyday life is often met when welding [1,2,3], screwing, or joining two flexible parts: if the operations of fixation are not executed in a well designed order, these parts may not be well assembled considering the project requirements.

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