4.7 Article

Geometry and tool motion planning for curvature adapted CNC machining

Journal

ACM TRANSACTIONS ON GRAPHICS
Volume 40, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/3450626.3459837

Keywords

Computer-Aided Manufacturing; CNC machining; curvature adapted machining; computational fabrication; path planning; motion planning

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities [PID2019-104488RB-I00]
  2. BCAM Severo Ochoa [SEV-2017-0718]
  3. European Union [862025]
  4. Ramon y Cajal fellowship [RYC-2017-22649]
  5. KAUST under BRF [3989]
  6. Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports [LO1506]
  7. KAUST

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CNC machining is a leading subtractive manufacturing technology that still presents challenging problems. Researchers have demonstrated high-quality surface finishes through careful geometric analysis of five-axis machining on freeform surfaces, reducing the need for hard-to-control post-machining processes.
CNC machining is the leading subtractive manufacturing technology. Although it is in use since decades, it is far from fully solved and still a rich source for challenging problems in geometric computing. We demonstrate this at hand of 5-axis machining of freeform surfaces, where the degrees of freedom in selecting and moving the cutting tool allow one to adapt the tool motion optimally to the surface to be produced. We aim at a high-quality surface finish, thereby reducing the need for hard-to-control post-machining processes such as grinding and polishing. Our work is based on a careful geometric analysis of curvature-adapted machining via so-called second order line contact between tool and target surface. On the geometric side, this leads to a new continuous transition between dual classical results in surface theory concerning osculating circles of surface curves and osculating cones of tangentially circumscribed developable surfaces. Practically, it serves as an effective basis for tool motion planning. Unlike previous approaches to curvature-adapted machining, we solve locally optimal tool positioning and motion planning within a single optimization framework and achieve curvature adaptation even for convex surfaces. This is possible with a toroidal cutter that contains a negatively curved cutting area. The effectiveness of our approach is verified at hand of digital models, simulations and machined parts, including a comparison to results generated with commercial software.

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