Surface scanning and path planning for non-planar 3D printing

Publikationen: Thesis / Studienabschlussarbeiten und HabilitationsschriftenDiplomarbeit

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Surface scanning and path planning for non-planar 3D printing. / Pan, Liang.
2014.

Publikationen: Thesis / Studienabschlussarbeiten und HabilitationsschriftenDiplomarbeit

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@phdthesis{20e03162613d45a29671bae9fad474fc,
title = "Surface scanning and path planning for non-planar 3D printing",
abstract = "This thesis describes a new approach for achieving a non-planar 3D printing with an industrial manipulator. In recent years 3D printing is becoming a promising new industry. It is applied in more and more areas. Simultaneously, with the improvement of production efficiency, the cost for industrial robots is decreasing. Our motivation is to combine the two technologies and to develop a method using a robot to expand the practical range of 3D printing. In this work firstly the basic concepts about robot kinematic modelling are introduced. Then the essential hard- and software equipment that is chosen to solve the problem is described. A method is presented using a laser distance sensor mounted on a robot to scan an arbitrary surface. Levenberg-Marquardt method is applied to find a least-mean-square approximation and to reconstruct the non-planar surface in real-time during the motion of the robot, which carries also a 3D printer head. For testing the algorithms a virtual reality simulation model of the robot was used. Finally the solution is successfully implemented in a Matlab/Simulink environment that controls the robot drives in real-time. With this work the feasibility of a non-planar 3D printing with an industrial robot is proved. A practicable approach consisting of surface scanning and printing is successfully applied on a real robot. At last some tracking error considerations are given.",
keywords = "industrial robot, kinematics, Denavit-Hartenberg convention, Levenberg-Marquardt method, quadric surface approximation, 3D printing, Industrieroboter, Kinematik, Denavit-Hartenberg Konvention, Levenberg-Marquardt Methode, Quadrik-Approximation, 3D-Drucken",
author = "Liang Pan",
note = "embargoed until null",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
type = "Diploma Thesis",

}

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TY - THES

T1 - Surface scanning and path planning for non-planar 3D printing

AU - Pan, Liang

N1 - embargoed until null

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - This thesis describes a new approach for achieving a non-planar 3D printing with an industrial manipulator. In recent years 3D printing is becoming a promising new industry. It is applied in more and more areas. Simultaneously, with the improvement of production efficiency, the cost for industrial robots is decreasing. Our motivation is to combine the two technologies and to develop a method using a robot to expand the practical range of 3D printing. In this work firstly the basic concepts about robot kinematic modelling are introduced. Then the essential hard- and software equipment that is chosen to solve the problem is described. A method is presented using a laser distance sensor mounted on a robot to scan an arbitrary surface. Levenberg-Marquardt method is applied to find a least-mean-square approximation and to reconstruct the non-planar surface in real-time during the motion of the robot, which carries also a 3D printer head. For testing the algorithms a virtual reality simulation model of the robot was used. Finally the solution is successfully implemented in a Matlab/Simulink environment that controls the robot drives in real-time. With this work the feasibility of a non-planar 3D printing with an industrial robot is proved. A practicable approach consisting of surface scanning and printing is successfully applied on a real robot. At last some tracking error considerations are given.

AB - This thesis describes a new approach for achieving a non-planar 3D printing with an industrial manipulator. In recent years 3D printing is becoming a promising new industry. It is applied in more and more areas. Simultaneously, with the improvement of production efficiency, the cost for industrial robots is decreasing. Our motivation is to combine the two technologies and to develop a method using a robot to expand the practical range of 3D printing. In this work firstly the basic concepts about robot kinematic modelling are introduced. Then the essential hard- and software equipment that is chosen to solve the problem is described. A method is presented using a laser distance sensor mounted on a robot to scan an arbitrary surface. Levenberg-Marquardt method is applied to find a least-mean-square approximation and to reconstruct the non-planar surface in real-time during the motion of the robot, which carries also a 3D printer head. For testing the algorithms a virtual reality simulation model of the robot was used. Finally the solution is successfully implemented in a Matlab/Simulink environment that controls the robot drives in real-time. With this work the feasibility of a non-planar 3D printing with an industrial robot is proved. A practicable approach consisting of surface scanning and printing is successfully applied on a real robot. At last some tracking error considerations are given.

KW - industrial robot

KW - kinematics

KW - Denavit-Hartenberg convention

KW - Levenberg-Marquardt method

KW - quadric surface approximation

KW - 3D printing

KW - Industrieroboter

KW - Kinematik

KW - Denavit-Hartenberg Konvention

KW - Levenberg-Marquardt Methode

KW - Quadrik-Approximation

KW - 3D-Drucken

M3 - Diploma Thesis

ER -