The invention concerns a method of producing a carrier structure which extends in a three-dimensional geometry of any desired curvature, and which comprises at least one first and one second flat piece of material. The geometry has curvatures in three mutually orthogonal directions, a carrier structure, a computer program product, and a production plant.
Carrier structures produced in accordance with the above-described method and generic carrier structures in general, for example, can be fitted to facades of building structures and carry facade elements. This involves geometries with a preferably polygonal cross section which—depending on the respective architectural specification—must be capable of (in general of constant cross section) bending with free shaping through space. In this, especially the required twisting of the geometry about its own axis is difficult to resolve construction-wise.
The object of the invention is to provide a method in which it is possible to produce in a simple fashion carrier structures extending in a three-dimensional geometry of any desired curvature, a carrier structure which extends in a three-dimensional geometry of any desired curvature, a computer program product, and a production plant.
The invention permits the production of dimensionally accurate carrier structures in a three-dimensional geometry of any desired curvature. The geometry can be, for example, a free-form geometry or a beam geometry. A geometry which is section-wise in the form of a free-form geometry and section-wise in the form of a beam geometry is also conceivable. Connecting the at least one beveled first piece of material and the at least one beveled second piece of material along the junctions results in the desired geometry automatically and in a simple and fault-free fashion. It is possible to build carrier structures of any length. The carrier structures can be covered or planked or can carry facade elements in another fashion.
The alphabetic enumeration of steps of the method according to the invention as described below is not to be interpreted as a compulsory order in which the steps have to be carried out (although the specified order is, of course, possible). For example, steps B and C or D, E and F could also be carried out in any changed order.
The invention is described with reference to drawings in which:
In order to ensure clarity of the display, not all reference numbers which occur per se are shown in all Figures.
Hereinafter, by way of example, a method according to the invention of producing a carrier structure 1 which extends in a three-dimensional geometry 2 of any desired curvature and which comprises at least one first and one second flat piece of material 3, 4 is described, wherein the geometry 2 has curvatures in three mutually orthogonal directions.
A first step A (
A second step B involves approximating the desired geometry 2 by ascertaining a plurality of polygonal cross sections 5 along a directrix 18 of the geometry 2 (
A further step C (
In the depicted preferred illustrative embodiment of a method according to the invention, dividing the geometry 2 into the at least one first and at least one second part 8, 9 is effected in the form of shells which run along the extent of the geometry 2 and which are connected by longitudinal strips.
A further step D (
A further step E (
A further step F (
A further step G involves unwinding the at least one first and one second part 8, 9 which are provided with the clearance areas 10 and junctions 11 and producing a cut contour for the at least one first and one second part 8, 9. One of the curvatures located in three mutually orthogonal directions is represented in the cut contours. That can be done by standard tool commands of a CAD program given manually or automated.
The method steps described above can be carried out purely electronically and represent the planning part of the method according to the invention. Those method steps can be encoded in a computer program product according to the invention. The cut contours as a result of the previous method steps A to G are to be provided in electronic form or in some other suitable fashion for the procedure of cutting. Steps H to J represent the production or manufacturing part of the method according to the invention and can be carried out with a production plant according to the invention.
Step H involves cutting at least one first and one second flat piece of material 3, 4 in accordance with the cut contours in relation to the at least one first and one second part 8, 9. The cutting procedure can be carried out manually or on automated cutting machines and results in the cut first and second flat pieces of material 3, 4 shown in
A further step I involves beveling the cut first and second flat pieces of material 3, 4 along the bevel edges 12 to achieve a beveled first piece of material 13 and a beveled second piece of material 14. Of course, the flat connecting pieces 15 do not have to be beveled and remain flat in the illustrated example.
A further step J (see
In the depicted illustrative embodiment of a method according to the invention, the polygonal cross sections 5 are formed with polygons of even-numbered order (order equals four) and at least two clearance areas 10 at opposite side lines 6 of the polygonal cross sections 5 are selected. As shown hereinafter, it is, however, also possible to use polygons with an odd-numbered order (for example, order equals three). In general, it is preferable to use one part 53, 54 of the individual surfaces 51, 52, 53, 54 as connecting parts for the remaining individual surfaces 51, 52 in case of polygons with an even-numbered order, and to directly connect (where applicable by way of extension) the individual surfaces 51, 52, 53 in the case of polygons with an odd-numbered order.
In the depicted preferred illustrative embodiment of a method according to the invention, connecting the beveled first piece of material 13 and the beveled second piece of material 14 by the junctions 11 is effected by at least one connecting piece 15 running through at least one part of the extent of the geometry 2. This is, however, not absolutely necessary—as described above.
In the depicted preferred illustrative embodiment of a method according to the invention, the connection is made at the plurality of junctions 11 in the form of rivet connections and/or screw connections and/or weld connections and/or adhesive connections.
In the depicted preferred illustrative embodiment of a method according to the invention, the polygonal cross sections 5 are determined in such way that a surface normal 16 of each polygonal cross section 5 runs parallel to the tangent 19 of the directrix 18, that is located at a piercing point 17 of the polygonal cross section and the directrix 18.
The method described results in a carrier structure 1 according to the invention which extends in a three-dimensional curved geometry 2 and which—in the illustrative embodiment shown—comprises one first and one second beveled piece of material 13, 14, and the geometry 2 has curvatures in three mutually orthogonal directions (see
The beveled first piece of material 13 and the beveled second piece of material 14 have clearance areas 10 produced by cuts along cut contours. One of the curvatures located in three mutually orthogonal directions is represented in the cut contours (that is to say already in the flat state of the pieces of material 13, 14).
The beveled first piece of material 13 and the beveled second piece of material 14 are connected along a plurality of junctions 11, and a rotating and/or twisting process of mutually adjoining regions of the beveled first piece of material 13 and the beveled second piece of material 14, permitted by the clearance areas 10, form the remaining two of the curvatures located in three mutually orthogonal directions.
The rotated and/or twisted beveled pieces of material 13, 14 are fixed in their rotated and/or twisted form by the connecting procedure.
As an alternative to
By way of example,
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP2018/055780 | Mar 2018 | US |
Child | 16576150 | US |