CVApr 27

Graph-augmented Segmentation of Complex Shapes in Laser Powder bed Fusion for Enhanced In Situ Inspection

arXiv:2604.242346.5
Predicted impact top 93% in CV · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For additive manufacturing quality control, this method addresses sensitivity to industrial illumination and layer variability, but the improvement is incremental over existing segmentation approaches.

The paper proposes a graph-augmented segmentation method for powder bed images in Laser Powder Bed Fusion, using a Graph Neural Network bottleneck in a U-Net to handle illumination and layer-to-layer variability. The method improves geometry reconstruction consistency and accuracy for lattice structures, showing potential for robust in situ inspection.

The technological maturity of in situ inspection and monitoring methods in additive manufacturing is steadily increasing, enabling more efficient and practical qualification procedures. In this context, image segmentation of powder bed images in Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) has been investigated by various authors, leveraging both edge detection and machine learning approaches to identify deviations from nominal geometry. Despite these developments, several challenges remain, including the sensitivity of segmentation performance to industrial illumination conditions and layer-to-layer variability in pixel intensity patterns. The study addresses these limitations by proposing a graph-augmented segmentation approach. The underlying principle consists of preserving the geometrical information at a global level rather than at pixel-wise level, modeling dependencies and relational information among spatial regions with a Graph Neural Network bottleneck embedded into a U-Net architecture. This allows enhancing the consistency and accuracy of the geometry reconstruction in the presence of spatial and layer-wise photometric variability systematically faced in real data. The method is evaluated against benchmark techniques for the in situ reconstruction of lattice structures produced by L-PBF, demonstrating its potential as a scalable solution for robust in situ inspection and geometric verification in industrial environments.

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