International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing (Jan 2024)

On-machine inspection and compensation for thin-walled parts with sculptured surface considering cutting vibration and probe posture

  • Yanpeng Hao,
  • Lida Zhu,
  • Shaoqing Qin,
  • Xiaoyu Pei,
  • Tianming Yan,
  • Qiuyu Qin,
  • Hao Lu,
  • Boling Yan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/2631-7990/ad6de3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 6
p. 065602

Abstract

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On-machine inspection has a significant impact on improving high-precision and efficient machining of sculptured surfaces. Due to the lack of machining information and the inability to adapt the parameters to the dynamic cutting conditions, theoretical modeling of profile inspection usually leads to insufficient adaptation, which causes inaccuracy problems. To address the above issues, a novel coupled model for profile inspection is proposed by combining the theoretical model and the data-driven model. The key process is to first realize local feature extraction based on the acquired vibration signals. The hybrid sampling model, which fuses geometric feature terms and vibration feature terms, is modeled by the lever principle. Then, the weight of each feature term is adaptively assigned by a multi-objective multi-verse optimizer. Finally, an inspection error compensation model based on the attention mechanism considering different probe postures is proposed to reduce the impact of pre-travel and radius errors on inspection accuracy. The anisotropy of the probe system error and its influence mechanism on the inspection accuracy are analyzed quantitatively and qualitatively. Compared with the previous models, the proposed hybrid profile inspection model can significantly improve the accuracy and efficiency of on-machine sampling. The proposed compensation model is able to correct the inspection errors with better accuracy. Simulations and experiments demonstrate the feasibility and validity of the proposed methods. The proposed model and corresponding new findings contribute to high-precision and efficient on-machine inspection, and help to understand the coupling mechanism of inspection errors.

Keywords