Fv-SVM-Based Wall-Thickness Error Decomposition for Adaptive Machining of Large Skin Parts

Large skin parts play an important role in the aerospace industry. The wall thickness of the machined pocket in the skin part needs to be strictly controlled to ensure the transport capacity and structural strength. The wall-thickness accuracy is generally decreased by various factors, such as the s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on industrial informatics Vol. 15; no. 4; pp. 2426 - 2434
Main Authors Bi, Qingzhen, Wang, Xinzhi, Wu, Qi, Zhu, Limin, Ding, Han
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Piscataway IEEE 01.04.2019
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
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Summary:Large skin parts play an important role in the aerospace industry. The wall thickness of the machined pocket in the skin part needs to be strictly controlled to ensure the transport capacity and structural strength. The wall-thickness accuracy is generally decreased by various factors, such as the shaping error of the workpiece blank, fixing error, machine tool error, and deformation caused by cutting force or internal stress. These factors are usually inevitable and stochastic due to the extremely weak rigidity and easy-to-deflect characteristics of the large skin parts. To ensure the wall-thickness accuracy, a fuzzy v-support vector machine (Fv-SVM)-based wall-thickness error decomposition method is proposed. The wall-thickness errors, which are monitored in the cutting process, are decomposed into spatial-related errors and time-related errors. The Fv-SVM-based decomposition method with the principle of spatial statistical analysis is a data-driven approach for intelligent manufacturing. The data-driven method can consider all factors that affect the wall-thickness accuracy, while the model-driven method usually only considers one factor, such as the workpiece deformation or fixing error. After decomposition, the spatial-related wall-thickness error is offline compensated, and the time-related wall-thickness error is compensated by using a real-time strategy. The novel method can be applied to complex tool paths. The cutting experiment of rectangular pockets in a large skin panel was conducted to verify the effectiveness of the proposed method. The wall-thickness accuracy can be improved to 0.05 mm for the workpiece with only 2 mm thickness.
ISSN:1551-3203
1941-0050
DOI:10.1109/TII.2018.2879500