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  5. Robot-guided pre-machining for repair by cold spray

Robot-guided pre-machining for repair by cold spray

Publication date
2024-01-12
Document type
Konferenzbeitrag
Author
Lewke, Marcel  
Wu, Hongjian  
List, Alexander  
Gärtner, Frank  
Klassen, Thomas  
Fay, Alexander  
Organisational unit
Automatisierungstechnik  
Werkstoffkunde  
DOI
10.1016/j.procir.2023.09.049
URI
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/22722
Conference
56th CIRP Conference on Manufacturing Systems (CIRP CMS ‘23) ; Cape Town, South Africa ; October 23–25, 2023
Project
Computergesteuerte Bauteilaufarbeitung  
Publisher
Elsevier
Series or journal
Procedia CIRP
ISSN
2212-8271
Periodical volume
120
First page
625
Last page
630
Peer-reviewed
✅
Part of the university bibliography
✅
Additional Information
Language
English
Abstract
Cold spraying is currently developing as a high potential technique for the repair of metallic components, particularly for the deposition of heat-and oxidation-sensitive materials. However, for the appropriate application, it is essential to prepare the component surface suitably to ensure optimum prerequisites for the subsequent material deposition by cold spray. Thus, this work proposes a concept for robot-guided pre-machining for repair by cold spray that includes removal of the damaged volume while considering the requirements for subsequent material deposition. In this concept, digital component and damage data define the dimensions and boundary conditions for material removal. This involves designing a parametric pre-machining target geometry for the damaged component by computer-aided design software that can handle variable surface types. The pre-machining target geometry is adapted to the damage characteristics by considering length, width, depth and orientation. To produce the pre-machining target geometry by machining tools, the adjusted component is exported to computer-aided manufacturing software. The applicability of this concept has been successfully demonstrated on digital use cases with exemplary components and damages as well as by practical application with a milling robot in a laboratory environment. The results demonstrate the capability of this concept for preparing damaged components and promise a high potential to ensure the required prerequisites for high-quality component repair by cold spray.
Description
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0).
Version
Published version
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