4.5 Article

Multifractal Analysis of Image Profiles for the Characterization and Detection of Defects in Additive Manufacturing

Publisher

ASME
DOI: 10.1115/1.4037891

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Funding

  1. NSF Center for e-Design
  2. NSF CAREER [CMMI-1617148]
  3. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1617148] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Metal-based powder-bed-fusion additive manufacturing (PBF-AM) is gaining increasing attention in modern industries, and is a promising direct manufacturing technology. Additive manufacturing (AM) does not require the tooling cost of conventional subtractive manufacturing processes, and is flexible to produce parts with complex geometries. Quality and repeatability of AM parts remain a challenging issue that persistently hampers wide applications of AM technology. Rapid advancements in sensing technology, especially imaging sensing systems, provide an opportunity to overcome such challenges. However, little has been done to fully utilize the image profiles acquired in the AM process and study the fractal patterns for the purpose of process monitoring, quality assessment, and control. This paper presents a new multifractal methodology for the characterization and detection of defects in PBF-AM parts. Both simulation and real-world case studies show that the proposed approach effectively detects and characterizes various defect patterns in AM images and has strong potential for quality control of AM processes.

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