LGCESYApr 30, 2025

Generative Machine Learning in Adaptive Control of Dynamic Manufacturing Processes: A Review

arXiv:2505.00210v26 citationsh-index: 3CiE
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This work addresses the problem of improving control systems in manufacturing for engineers and researchers, but it is incremental as it reviews and proposes directions rather than presenting new experimental results.

This review tackles the challenge of integrating generative machine learning into adaptive control for dynamic manufacturing processes, which are complex and uncertain, by proposing a functional classification and demonstrating its potential for decision-making and digital twins while identifying research gaps.

Dynamic manufacturing processes exhibit complex characteristics defined by time-varying parameters, nonlinear behaviors, and uncertainties. These characteristics require sophisticated in-situ monitoring techniques utilizing multimodal sensor data and adaptive control systems that can respond to real-time feedback while maintaining product quality. Recently, generative machine learning (ML) has emerged as a powerful tool for modeling complex distributions and generating synthetic data while handling these manufacturing uncertainties. However, adopting these generative technologies in dynamic manufacturing systems lacks a functional control-oriented perspective to translate their probabilistic understanding into actionable process controls while respecting constraints. This review presents a functional classification of Prediction-Based, Direct Policy, Quality Inference, and Knowledge-Integrated approaches, offering a perspective for understanding existing ML-enhanced control systems and incorporating generative ML. The analysis of generative ML architectures within this framework demonstrates control-relevant properties and potential to extend current ML-enhanced approaches where conventional methods prove insufficient. We show generative ML's potential for manufacturing control through decision-making applications, process guidance, simulation, and digital twins, while identifying critical research gaps: separation between generation and control functions, insufficient physical understanding of manufacturing phenomena, and challenges adapting models from other domains. To address these challenges, we propose future research directions aimed at developing integrated frameworks that combine generative ML and control technologies to address the dynamic complexities of modern manufacturing systems.

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