This invention relates to a 3D additive manufacturing system's Array. The Print Array architecture is devised to support and manage scalable part production by deploying a modular interface between the Print Array Host and the Print Unit modules.
Over the decades, additive manufacturing (AM) has matured into a reliable technology with a great variety of equipment and advanced software options. Faster machines, better materials, and smarter software are helping to make AM a realistic solution for many real-world production applications. As processes have matured and materials science has accelerated, additive manufacturing is now used throughout the full production cycle complementing traditional manufacturing processes.
AM technology is now proven, well-understood and established as a manufacturing method across many industry sectors. The key standards have been developed, enabling repeatable quality at scale. AM systems offer several benefits, including increased flexibility, independence, as well as time and cost savings.
Industrial 3D printing systems have been developed as complex technical equipment, which requires technical training to develop practical operation and maintenance skills. Taking into consideration the organization's need for early-stage adoption and scalability, the present invention aims at making more efficient operation, maintenance, technical services to 3D printing systems so to reduce downtime, and thus maintenance and training costs.
The main obstacle preventing the adoption of 3D printers into an industrial manufacturing process is the lack of a workflow from prototyping to scalable production. In fact, companies use 3D printers as stand-alone equipment in which they prototype and also manufacture the final parts they need in low volume batches. A target company may purchase a few units to cover the production needs by operating each unit individually.
On one side, the R&D team requires the agility to iterate prototypes and finalize the design for each component. On the other side, the procurement team has to develop the supply chain, and thus determine whether to convert the designs onto another manufacturing process (with great cost and lead time) or, if manufacturing with 3D printers is possible for that application, to purchase more 3D printers to meet the production needs. No 3D printer product line offers a real solution to solve both the needs of the R&D team and those of procurement.
Providing a path to an additive manufacturing Production Network requires hardware, electronics, control protocols and software. This patent covers the interface between the Print Array Host and the Print Unit modules.
Process development is based on the system architecture of the 3D printer being used. The critical machine elements are the XY motion system, hotend, nozzle geometry, filament drive system, chamber heating, and filament drying. Related variables material type and size are either determined by the machine requirements.
The current state-of-the-art Stratasys FDM systems are typical. On one hand, the F370 prototyping system is based on MakerBot technology, has limited materials, and is priced for departmental use at less than $50,000. On the other hand, their industrial model Fortus 450MC is based on older Stratasys technology and has a more extensive range of materials and is priced at around $160,000-220,000.
The issue with the use of these machines is that they share very little in architecture; like they were created by different companies. An engineer creating functional prototypes on the F370 has to redo that development effort on the production machine to scale.
These are all impediments to the creation of a true digital workflow. The node-based 3D printing is a structural difference, that requires a new control protocol and results in a network-based production: the Production Network.
Interoperability at this level enables not just distributed control of a machine, but distributed production.
The interface design from the Print Array Host to the Print Unit is both unique and protectable. The separation of control electronics makes these modular and interchangeable. The swappable and interchangeable architecture forces a separation of the Print Unit and control electronics. This will increase economies of scale and help create a de facto standard. The common logical interface enforced this way also opens up generic APIs to address and control network printers.
The interface between the Print Unit and the Print Array Host controls are well defined so that other Print Unit types could include both additive, traditional manufacturing, inspection, and scanning technologies.
This marketplace for Print Unit modules creates a Production Network and the network marketing effect.
Further features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying figures showing illustrative embodiments of the invention, in which:
The systems of the present invention were designed for different users, spaces and applications for additive manufacturing. The Single Print Unit (
These users and setups have different needs. While a designer at an office may see material drying, print queuing, on-screen slicing, automatic material backup and others as “nice-to-have” features, for a production engineer running a batch of hundreds or thousands of parts at a factory they significantly lower labor, downtime, and risk of failure.
For prototyping and first adoption, Single Print Unit (
The novelty of the present patent is the modular structure of the Print Unit (
The design of the Print Array control architecture enables remote use and control of a mass installation of Print Unit capacity. The core of the Production Network relies on unique multi-level electronics architecture. The distributed control allows maximum flexibility to manage both additive and traditional manufacturing technologies.
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, Fused Filament Fabrication (FFF) is the 3D printing technology deployed. In another embodiment, interchangeable modules can include all types of additive manufacturing equipment, as well as traditional manufacturing, inspection and scanning technologies.
Production Machines consist of a sturdy aluminum framing structure (
The design of the motion module is used both in the Single Print Units (
Single Print Units (
These Single Print Units (
Single Print Units have an integrated electronics architecture (4) which is not removable. Single Print Units (
Single Print Units (
Each Print Unit (
The present invention enables a Production Network for additive manufacturing technologies using a unique interface architecture based on Hardware, Electronics, Control Architecture, and Software. The designs to make these modules interchangeable are a fundamental enabler of the Production Network. Said architecture encompasses a unique physical, electrical, and logical interface.
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, a Print Unit consists of a sturdy aluminum framing structure (
The Print Unit (
Each Print Unit (
The Print Units' sliding mounting systems (
Each Print Unit in the Print Array has an Electronics Module located in proximate distance (
Electronics Modules (2) in the Print Array are modular and slide-out interchangeable subassemblies (7). Electronics Modules consist of a metal cabinet (
Each Electronics Module is sized to be easily removed from the Print Array by a single operator by pulling from a handle (15). The interchangeability of all Electronics Modules is required to enable this Production Network and improve uptime. Additionally, serviceability is improved by the quick-change and interchangeable nature of the Electronics Module in the Print Array.
Each Electronics Module is equipped with a sliding mounting (7) system. In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the sliding mounting system consists of two keying elements (13) which fit into T-slotted aluminum profiles (13), allowing modules to slide in and out with ease. Blocking clamps can added including screw clamps, spring clamps, strap clamps, bench clamps, or any other means to secure each module to the Print Array structure (
The physical layout of the electrical connections is also a keying element together with its order and arrangement of electrical conductors. The Print Unit module connects to an Electronics Module thanks to a keying element at the end of its cabling bundle (5). In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the keying element is an industrial 108-pin heavy duty connector for plug socket (5, 12, 15). Each Print Unit (6), Electronics Module (7), Feeding and Drying Module (8) are interchangeable and can be easily removed individually.
This modular architecture allows fast removal with almost no production downtime. Print Units (
The design of the Electronics Module is used both in the Single Print Units (
The Electronics Module compact metal enclosure (
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, said electrical keying element is an industrial 108-pin heavy-duty connector. Cabling from the Print Unit electronics is organized into a bundle ending in a female 108-pin connector (5), while the male 108-pin connector is in the Electronics Module (12, 15). Electronics Modules can be conveniently swapped in three steps by: i. sliding out the cabinet (7), ii. unplugging the Print Unit cabling bundle (5) from the 108-pin connector on the rear panel of the Electronics Module (12, 15), iii. unplugging the EM's power plug (14).
Each Electronics Module provides power to one Print Unit element components, such as motors, heating system, cooling circuit, air-flow system. It passes through status information and controls switches in the Buffer (31) and material Drying and Feeding System (29). The Electronics Modules (2, 7) sends commands to the Buffer (31) in the Print Array which reports to the Feeding System electronics (30). The Feeding System (
The design of the Print Array's control architecture enables remote use and control of a mass installation of Print Unit capacity. It is the core of the Production Network. The Print Array distributes control to allow maximum flexibility to manage additive and traditional technologies. The central CPU (34) supports the computing needs of generic APIs for a Production Network.
Offloading these CPU cycles to a non-real-time system is required for precise control of a Production Network. In the present invention, said non-real-time systems are sets composed by the following interchangeable modules: one Print Unit module (6), one Electronics Module (7), and one Feeding and Drying Module (8).
Each set (
Each module self-identifies on this Production Network as an individual addressable and controllable print node. Thanks to this logical interface handshake protocol, this node-based 3D printing system creates a new control protocol and sets the foundations for a network-based production, based on a true digital workflow.
The Electronics Module sets global address and type for network, and reads nozzle size for the Print Unit, material type from the material feeding system, and Print Unit's performance offsets. The common logical interface enforced this way also opens up generic APIs to address and control network printers. It also supports RFID, Bluetooth, Bluetooth-LE, IoT interface for logic expansion.
The flexibility of the modular interface between the Print Array Host and the modular and interchangeable Print Units improves serviceability and uptime, which are crucial for scaling up manufacturing. The distributed control grants maximum flexibility to manage both additive and traditional manufacturing, inspection, and scanning technologies. The modular architecture allows economies of scale, by reducing the cost of both production and prototyping modules. This eliminates the gap to adopt and scale up additive manufacturing in high-volume industrial environments, as factories can simply add Production Arrays (
The foregoing describes the preferred embodiment of the invention and sets forth the best mode contemplated for carrying out the invention in such terms as to facilitate the practice of the invention by a person of ordinary skill in the art. However, it is to be understood that the invention has many aspects, is not limited to the structure, processes, methods, and embodiment disclosed and/or claimed, and that equivalents to the disclosed structure, processes, methods, embodiment, and claims are within the scope of the invention as defined by the claims appended hereto or added subsequently.
Although the present invention has been described herein with reference to the foregoing exemplary embodiment, this embodiment does not serve to limit the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, those skilled in the art to which the present invention pertains will appreciate that various modifications and equivalents are possible, without departing from the technical spirit of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63328566 | Apr 2022 | US |