Stereolithography Characterization for Surface Finish Improvement: Inverse Design Methods for Process Planning

To facilitate the transition of Stereolithography (SLA) into the manufacturing domain and to increase its appeal to the micro manufacturing industry, process repeatability and surface finish need to be improved. Researchers have mostly focused on improving SLA surface finish within the capabilities...

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Main Author: Sager, Benay
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/10527
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spelling ndltd-GATECH-oai-smartech.gatech.edu-1853-105272013-01-07T20:14:00ZStereolithography Characterization for Surface Finish Improvement: Inverse Design Methods for Process PlanningSager, BenayRapid manufacturingRapid prototypingManufacturingSurface roughnessSurface finishSLA cure modelingStereolithography cureProcess planningSurfaces FinishingMicrofabrication Computer-aided designRapid prototypingTo facilitate the transition of Stereolithography (SLA) into the manufacturing domain and to increase its appeal to the micro manufacturing industry, process repeatability and surface finish need to be improved. Researchers have mostly focused on improving SLA surface finish within the capabilities of commercially available SLA machines. The capabilities of these machines are limited and a machine-specific approach for improving surface finish is based purely on empirical data. In order to improve surface finish of the SLA process, a more systematic approach that will incorporate process parameters is needed. To achieve this, the contribution of different laser and process parameters, such as laser beam angle, irradiance distribution, and scan speed, to SLA resolution and indirectly to surface finish, need to be quantified and incorporated into an analytical model. In response, a dynamic analytical SLA cure model has been developed. This model has been applied to SLA geometries of interest. Using flat surfaces, the efficacy of the model has been computationally and experimentally demonstrated. The model has been applied to process planning as a computational inverse design method by using parameter estimation techniques, where surface finish improvement on slanted surfaces has been achieved. The efficacy of this model and its improvement over the traditional cure models has been demonstrated computationally and experimentally. Based on the experimental results, use of the analytical model in process planning achieves an order of magnitude improvement in surface roughness average of SLA parts. The intellectual contributions of this research are the development of an analytical SLA cure model and the application of this model to process planning along with inverse design techniques for parameter estimation and subsequent surface finish improvement.Georgia Institute of Technology2006-06-09T18:19:41Z2006-06-09T18:19:41Z2006-04-11Dissertation5495186 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1853/10527en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Rapid manufacturing
Rapid prototyping
Manufacturing
Surface roughness
Surface finish
SLA cure modeling
Stereolithography cure
Process planning
Surfaces Finishing
Microfabrication Computer-aided design
Rapid prototyping
spellingShingle Rapid manufacturing
Rapid prototyping
Manufacturing
Surface roughness
Surface finish
SLA cure modeling
Stereolithography cure
Process planning
Surfaces Finishing
Microfabrication Computer-aided design
Rapid prototyping
Sager, Benay
Stereolithography Characterization for Surface Finish Improvement: Inverse Design Methods for Process Planning
description To facilitate the transition of Stereolithography (SLA) into the manufacturing domain and to increase its appeal to the micro manufacturing industry, process repeatability and surface finish need to be improved. Researchers have mostly focused on improving SLA surface finish within the capabilities of commercially available SLA machines. The capabilities of these machines are limited and a machine-specific approach for improving surface finish is based purely on empirical data. In order to improve surface finish of the SLA process, a more systematic approach that will incorporate process parameters is needed. To achieve this, the contribution of different laser and process parameters, such as laser beam angle, irradiance distribution, and scan speed, to SLA resolution and indirectly to surface finish, need to be quantified and incorporated into an analytical model. In response, a dynamic analytical SLA cure model has been developed. This model has been applied to SLA geometries of interest. Using flat surfaces, the efficacy of the model has been computationally and experimentally demonstrated. The model has been applied to process planning as a computational inverse design method by using parameter estimation techniques, where surface finish improvement on slanted surfaces has been achieved. The efficacy of this model and its improvement over the traditional cure models has been demonstrated computationally and experimentally. Based on the experimental results, use of the analytical model in process planning achieves an order of magnitude improvement in surface roughness average of SLA parts. The intellectual contributions of this research are the development of an analytical SLA cure model and the application of this model to process planning along with inverse design techniques for parameter estimation and subsequent surface finish improvement.
author Sager, Benay
author_facet Sager, Benay
author_sort Sager, Benay
title Stereolithography Characterization for Surface Finish Improvement: Inverse Design Methods for Process Planning
title_short Stereolithography Characterization for Surface Finish Improvement: Inverse Design Methods for Process Planning
title_full Stereolithography Characterization for Surface Finish Improvement: Inverse Design Methods for Process Planning
title_fullStr Stereolithography Characterization for Surface Finish Improvement: Inverse Design Methods for Process Planning
title_full_unstemmed Stereolithography Characterization for Surface Finish Improvement: Inverse Design Methods for Process Planning
title_sort stereolithography characterization for surface finish improvement: inverse design methods for process planning
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/10527
work_keys_str_mv AT sagerbenay stereolithographycharacterizationforsurfacefinishimprovementinversedesignmethodsforprocessplanning
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