Abstract

Additive manufacturing (AM) makes it possible to fabricate complicated parts that are otherwise difficult to manufacture by subtractive machining. However, such parts often require temporary support material to prevent the component from collapsing or warping during fabrication. The support material results in increased material consumption, manufacturing time, and clean-up costs. The surface precision and dimensional accuracy of the workpieces from AM are far from the engineering requirement due to layer upon layer manufacturing. Subtractive machining (SM), by contrast, can fabricate parts to satisfy the requirements of surface precision and dimensional accuracy. Nevertheless, the components need to be relatively uncomplicated for subtractive manufacturing. Thus, hybrid additive-subtractive manufacturing (HASM) is gaining increasing attention in order to take advantages of both processes. There is little research on the topological design methodology for this hybrid manufacturing technology. To address this issue, a method based on geometry approach for topology optimization of continuum structure is proposed in this paper. Both additive manufacturing and subtractive machining constraints are simultaneously considered in each topology optimization iteration. The topology optimization is performed by the bi-directional evolutionary structural optimization (BESO) method. The effectiveness of the proposed method is demonstrated by several 3D compliance minimization problems.

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