High performance computing simulations to identify process parameter designs for profitable titanium machining
Autor: | Mathew Kuttolamadom, John C. Ziegert, Joshua J. Jones, Laine Mears, Thomas R. Kurfess, James Barr von Oehsen |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0209 industrial biotechnology
Engineering business.industry Design of experiments 02 engineering and technology Process variable iSight Supercomputer computer.software_genre Automation Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Simulation software Reliability engineering 020303 mechanical engineering & transports 020901 industrial engineering & automation Software 0203 mechanical engineering Machining Hardware and Architecture Control and Systems Engineering business computer Simulation |
Zdroj: | Journal of Manufacturing Systems. 43:235-247 |
ISSN: | 0278-6125 |
Popis: | The objective of this paper was to conduct a study of the multi-level multi-variable design space in titanium machining through high performance computing (HPC) simulations that was otherwise too vast to be explored by physical experiments alone. For tool wear-based performance metrics, this resulted in a validated set of machining parameters for achieving profitable material removal rates (MRR) (optimized cost of processing and tooling) across multiple operational configurations, alloys, tool geometries, and process conditions. The approach was to include all machining-related variables and their distributions available within the software as inputs to finite-element models (FEM) of the machining process. The time intensiveness of conducting such large numbers of lengthy simulations was handled by wrapping Third Wave Systems AdvantEdge FEM machining simulation software with Dassault Systemes iSight to automate the building of experimental designs and their parallel execution on a HPC cluster. Results were analyzed using SimaFore software to identify key characteristics through bivariate analyses. A subset of simulations was validated through physical experiments, and these were in turn used to augment physically untested regions in the design space. Based on this, an MRR-based cost model for orthogonal turning was derived to drive optimal machining setups. This study showed the feasibility of integrating and automating a HPC loop involving the generation of suitable design of experiments (DOE), creating simulation jobs, deploying/executing it on a HPC cluster, and scripting outputs in a useful format. Besides highlighting the challenges in reading/transferring data across different software and in handling/compiling large amounts of data, this study also shed light on the need for benchmarking processor–operating system–software combinations for computational efficiency. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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