LGCENADATA-ANNov 14, 2023

Statistical Parameterized Physics-Based Machine Learning Digital Twin Models for Laser Powder Bed Fusion Process

arXiv:2311.07821v11 citationsh-index: 24
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This work addresses quality assurance and defect diagnostics in metal additive manufacturing, offering a domain-specific solution that is incremental by combining physics-based and machine learning approaches.

The paper tackles the challenge of predicting and controlling defects in laser powder bed fusion additive manufacturing by developing a parameterized physics-based digital twin model, which enables statistical predictions of melt pool geometries and identifies defects like lack-of-fusion porosity and surface roughness, validated through experiments.

A digital twin (DT) is a virtual representation of physical process, products and/or systems that requires a high-fidelity computational model for continuous update through the integration of sensor data and user input. In the context of laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) additive manufacturing, a digital twin of the manufacturing process can offer predictions for the produced parts, diagnostics for manufacturing defects, as well as control capabilities. This paper introduces a parameterized physics-based digital twin (PPB-DT) for the statistical predictions of LPBF metal additive manufacturing process. We accomplish this by creating a high-fidelity computational model that accurately represents the melt pool phenomena and subsequently calibrating and validating it through controlled experiments. In PPB-DT, a mechanistic reduced-order method-driven stochastic calibration process is introduced, which enables the statistical predictions of the melt pool geometries and the identification of defects such as lack-of-fusion porosity and surface roughness, specifically for diagnostic applications. Leveraging data derived from this physics-based model and experiments, we have trained a machine learning-based digital twin (PPB-ML-DT) model for predicting, monitoring, and controlling melt pool geometries. These proposed digital twin models can be employed for predictions, control, optimization, and quality assurance within the LPBF process, ultimately expediting product development and certification in LPBF-based metal additive manufacturing.

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