Adaptive Control of Freeze-Form Extrusion Fabrication Processes (Preprint)

Abstract

Freeze-form Extrusion Fabrication (FEF) is an additive manufacturing process that extrudes high solids loading aqueous ceramic pastes in a layer-by-layer fashion below the paste freezing temperature for component fabrication. Due to effects such as the air bubble release, agglomerate breakdown, change in paste properties during extrusion as a result of liquid phase migration, etc., the extrusion force is difficult to control. In this paper, an adaptive controller is proposed to regulate the extrusion force. Recursive Least Squares is used to estimate extrusion force model parameters during fabrication and a low-order control scheme capable of tracking general reference trajectories is designed and implemented to regulate the extrusion process. The controller is implemented to regulate the extrusion process. The controller is implemented for sinusoidal, triangular, and square reference trajectories and the results demonstrate excellent tracking performance of the adaptive extrusion force controller. Several parts were fabricated with the adaptive extrusion force controller. These results illustrate the need for extrusion force control and that variable reference extrusion.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
May 01, 2008
Accession Number
ADA490822

Entities

People

  • Ming C. Leu
  • Robert G. Landers
  • Xiyue Zhao

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Additive Manufacturing
  • Agglomerates (Rock)
  • Air Force
  • Air Force Research Laboratories
  • Control Systems
  • Fabrication
  • Frequency
  • Liquid Phases
  • Liquids
  • Manufacturing
  • Materials
  • Migration
  • Military Research
  • Phase
  • Standards
  • Trajectories
  • Transfer Functions

Fields of Study

  • Materials science

Readers

  • Pavement Materials Engineering.
  • Robotics and Automation.
  • Software Engineering