The present invention relates to the methods, systems and installations intended for the robotized treatment of welds by high-frequency peening.
The aim of high-frequency peening is to enhance the fatigue behavior of mechanically welded workpieces. It is a cold mechanical treatment which consists in striking the surface of a metal part and more particularly the root of the weld bead with one or more micro-strikers of high kinetic energy, also called needles or impactors, to release the tensile stresses located in the heat-affected zone (ZAT) by performing, on the one hand, a cold working which induces compression stresses and, on the other hand, a geometrical modification ensuring a progressive transition between the base metal and the weld bead.
Established or current studies show that high-frequency peening ensures improved fatigue behavior, through an action delaying the initiation of cracks and the propagation thereof.
Needles, generally with spherical head held in the treating head, are projected at high speed and at high frequency against the weld in order to peen the zone. This controlled treatment ensures an extension of the life of the welded components through the combined effect of the geometrical modification of the transition between the base metal and the weld bead and of the introduction of beneficial compression stresses in the heat-affected zone. In particular, the high-frequency peening activated by ultrasounds is one of the best preventive treatments for improving the fatigue strength of the mechanically welded workpieces.
The peening operation is generally performed manually. The manual implementation of the peening requires the availability of qualified operators. The peening cannot be implemented on long runs but essentially on unitary workpieces. Furthermore, monitoring and quantifying peening quality in manual operations is complex.
A robotized peening method is known from US2011/0123820 that uses an impactor with a determined geometry.
There is a need to robotize this operation and to be able to implement it in mass production, with more accurate traceability, and better quality control.
Method
The present invention thus relates, according to a first of its aspects, to a method for robotized peening of a weld bead produced on a base surface of a metal workpiece, using a robotized system, comprising the following steps:
By virtue of the invention, there is a robotized peening method that is fast, accurate and reliable. The trajectory followed by the peening tool is perfectly suited to the weld bead to be treated, by virtue of the steps of acquisition of the local data on the relief and position of the weld bead and its near environment and of calculation of the corrected trajectory. The trajectory may be calculated on the basis of the real position and orientation of the weld bead and the surrounding surfaces and geometries of the workpiece, in particular of the root of the weld bead and on the basis of the accessibility of the bead for the peening tool.
The initial trajectory is advantageously that of a peening tool.
The local data on the relief and position of the weld bead and on the adjacent zone or zones of the base surface of the workpiece may comprise, for any point of the weld bead, the spatial coordinates of the root of the weld bead and the angle formed at the root between the weld bead and the base surface of the workpiece. The root in fact forms the end of the weld bead, being situated at the limit between the weld bead and the base surface of the workpiece.
These geometrical data make it possible to deduce the spatial coordinates of the bisector of the angle formed at the root between the weld bead and the base surface of the workpiece, at each point of the weld bead root. Knowing the spatial position of the root and of the bisector, it is possible to deduce therefrom the so-called detection axis for each point of the root, composed of a straight line passing through this point and coinciding with the bisector. It is also possible, for smoothing the corrected trajectory by discarding certain very local defects, to apply a filter to a succession of points.
“The zone or zones of the base surface in proximity to the weld bead” should be understood to mean the part or parts of the base surface of the workpiece, situated for example from the root of the weld bead to a distance less than 100 mm from the weld bead, on one side thereof or on both sides, on either side of the weld bead. This or these zone or zones may form a strip alongside the weld bead or two strips on either side thereof. They may extend in a particular embodiment to a distance of approximately 8 mm from the weld bead. In another embodiment, this or these zone or zones may extend to a distance of approximately 60 mm from the weld bead.
The method may also comprise, before the peening step, a step of monitoring the corrected trajectory consisting in:
If appropriate, if necessary, in particular if the corrected trajectory does not coincide with the new local data on the relief and position of the weld bead, the corrected trajectory may be corrected once again.
The step of monitoring of the corrected trajectory may also comprise the taking of geometrical measurements of the surface to be peened.
The surface to be peened may include the weld bead around the root and the base surface in immediate proximity to the root or, as a variant, the base surface to a maximum distance from the root of approximately 10 mm.
The method may also comprise a differential calculation step making it possible to calculate the differential deviation between the initial trajectory and the real position making it possible to achieve the corrected trajectory.
After the peening step, the method may also comprise a quality control step consisting in controlling the robotized system provided with the effector bearing the scanning tool so as to acquire local data on the relief and position of the peened weld bead, in order to monitor and quantify the quality thereof.
In this case, and in the case where a step of monitoring of the trajectory has been performed with the taking of geometrical measurements of the surface to be peened, the quality control step may comprise the taking of geometrical measurements of the peened surface, and the comparison with the geometrical measurements of the surface to be peened, in order to conclude on the quality of the peening. The geometrical measurements are taken in such a way as to be comparable, between those of the surface to be peened and those of the peened surface.
The peening forms, by the high frequency impact on the root of the weld bead, a hollowed-out line, called undercut or furrow, having a depth, generally lying between 0.1 and 0.5 mm, and a radius generally lying between 1 and 3 mm, the depth and the radius of the undercut being linked to the force of the impact, to the frequency and to the rate of displacement, the undercut also having a width linked to the penetration into the material and to the diameter of the impactor or impactors. Thus, it is possible to define predetermined target values, particularly for the radius and the depth of the undercut, depth at the level of the weld bead and depth at the level of the base surface. Then, with the two takings of geometrical measurements of the surface before and after peening and the comparison thereof, it is possible to calculate the values such as the radius and the depth and compare them with the predetermined target values. A predefined margin of error may be accepted. After the predetermined target values and this margin of error have been taken into account, it is possible to conclude whether the quality of the peening is deemed satisfactory or not. The geometrical measurements taken are such that they may make it possible to calculate the radius and the depth of peening at the weld bead and the base surface, by comparison.
By virtue of the invention, there is an increased capacity to be able to monitor upstream, that is to say before peening, and downstream, that is to say after peening, the geometrical measurements.
If the quality of the peening is deemed insufficient, the method may comprise a subsequent step of peening of all or part of the peened surface by control of the robotized system provided with the effector bearing the peening tool along the corrected trajectory.
The method may comprise a step of control of the robotized system provided with an effector bearing a grinding or milling tool along the corrected trajectory in order to perform a finishing of the peened surface. The aim of this finishing operation is to eliminate the material folds created by the peening while retaining the compression stresses of the zone or surface peened.
In a particular embodiment, the method comprises at least one step of changing of effector, the robotized system being provided either with an effector bearing the peening tool capable of performing the peening step or steps, or with an effector bearing the scanning tool capable of performing the step or steps of acquisition of local data on the relief and position of the weld bead. Likewise, when a grinding or milling step is provided, the method may comprise a step of changing of effector before performing the grinding step, the robotized system being provided, for this step, with an effector bearing a grinding or milling tool.
In this case, the effectors bearing the peening and scanning tools, and possibly grinding or milling tools, are advantageously configured and linked to the robotized system so as to have the same tool reference point, or tool center point (TCP). That makes it possible to exploit the property of repeatability of the robot to perform the successive steps of the method with the different effectors. Also, the changing of effector makes it possible to eradicate the vibrations of the peening to perform the scan.
As a variant, the method may not comprise a step of changing of effector, the robotized system then being provided with an effector bearing at least the peening tool and the scanning tool, and, if appropriate, the grinding or milling tool.
The method may comprise a step, when the scanning tool is following the initial trajectory, consisting in automatically detecting weld defects on the weld bead. This step may consist in making it possible, via the bead location algorithm, to detect a zone of the weld bead comprising a succession of aberrant points, linked to the defect(s). In this case, the method may comprise the step consisting in controlling, in the peening step, a displacement along an axis allowing a disengagement of the tool without the latter interfering with the workpiece being treated or the environment in order not to treat the zone by peening. This axis is generally the main axis of the peening tool or the main axis of the impactor or impactors.
In this case, the method may comprise the step consisting in transmitting, via a human-machine interface (HMI), an item of information, intended for the operator, according to which an identified zone of the weld bead has not been treated by peening. This zone will be able to be corrected and treated subsequently, manually or automatically, after correction of the identified defect or defects. The method may comprise the step consisting in representing, on a 3D view of the workpiece or on a 3D reconstruction of the trajectory, the location of the identified defect or defects.
Robotized System
Another subject of the invention, in combination with the above, is a robotized system for implementing the method as defined above, comprising at least one effector comprising at least:
The robotized system may comprise a robotized arm. The precision of a robotized arm, in its absolute position, is generally greater than 1 mm. Such imprecision may be due to geometrical model errors, errors in quantification of the position measurement and/or flexibilities.
The repeatability of a robot is the maximum error of repeated positioning of the tool at any point of its workspace. Generally, the repeatability is less than 1 mm, even 0.1 mm, therefore comparatively better than the precision of the robotized system. The robotized system may, as a variant, comprise a machine-tool gantry, or other type of robotized system comprising multiple displacement axes.
“Effector” should be understood to mean a system fixed removably to the robotized system, in particular at the end of the arm of the robot, and actuated by the robot.
The robotized system may be provided alternatively with an effector bearing said at least one scanning tool and with an effector bearing said at least one peening tool. The effectors bearing the scanning tool and the peening tool may be configured such that the tool center point (TCP) is identical for the effector bearing the peening tool and the effector bearing the scanning tool. As indicated above, that makes it possible to rely on the repeatability of the robot, generally better than the precision of the robot, for the peening operation.
The robotized system may comprise an effector bearing a grinding or milling tool.
In a particular embodiment, the robotized system is alternatively provided with the effector bearing the scanning tool or the peening effector, or, if appropriate, with the effector bearing the grinding or milling tool.
As a variant, the robotized system is provided with a combined effector which incorporates the peening and scanning functions simultaneously. The effector may comprise in particular two scanning tools situated on either side of the peening tool, in the direction of relative advance of the robotized system in the peening step. In this case, the robotized system may also be provided with the grinding or milling tool.
It should be noted that the robotized system may, if appropriate, be used to perform the welding before the peening, it then being linked to an effector bearing a welding tool. In this case, or in that where two different robots are used, one for the welding and one for the peening, the trajectory of the welding tool may be similar to the trajectory of the peening tool.
The robotized system may comprise a compliance provided to maintain the contact between the peening tool and the weld bead during the peening and to monitor the contact force. In this case, the compliance is for example positioned in the detection axis, resulting from the spatial position of the root of the weld bead and of the bisector. The compliance may comprise a passive or active damping means. The calibrated force of contact at rest, that is to say when the peening is not active, between the peening tool and the weld bead is monitored so as to preferably lie between 1N and 500N, better between 2N and 200N and usually used between 70N and 100N. In particular when there is no changing of effector, the compliance may be useful because it makes it possible to attenuate vibrations provoked by the peening.
The robotized system may comprise an angular compliance, arranged to deflect, if necessary, the peening tool toward the root of the weld bead to be treated in a plane substantially orthogonal to the bead, the angular compliance allowing an angular play of the peening tool lying between 0 and 30°, better between 0 and 5° This angular compliance may be produced from two plates pivoting relative to one another about an axis and having fixed damped end stops. The axis will preferentially intersect and be at right angles to the main axis of the peening tool. The damping may be produced by flexible end stops of elastomer type or by mechanical system, such as by gas dampers or springs for example. The damping system must allow the tool to be maintained in nominal position whatever its spatial orientation and ensure a moment on the tool about the rotation axis preferably lying between 0.1 Nm and 1000 Nm, better between 1 Nm and 100 Nm.
The scanning tool is advantageously chosen from the group composed of the contact-based relief and position data acquisition systems, such as mechanical feelers, and the contactless relief and position data acquisition systems, such as optical sensors, in particular laser or camera, inductive sensors, capacitive sensors.
The rate of advance of the peening tool along the weld bead during the peening operation may lie between 1 and 40 mm/s, preferably between 5 and 10 mm/s.
The high-frequency peening technology of the peening tool is advantageously chosen from the group composed of ultrasound peening, pneumatic peening, linear mechanical peening and linear electric motor peening. In the ultrasound or pneumatic high-frequency peening techniques, the impactors, in particular with hemispherical head, are captive to the treatment head and projected against the weld respectively by virtue of the vibration of the sonotrode or of a pneumatic actuator in order to peen the zone.
In the linear motor technique, the impactors may be fixed to or propelled by the carriage of the linear motor, the impactors are held in the tool and moved by the magnetic carriage of the motor.
For all these techniques, the impact frequency of the impactors may lie between 1 and 1000 Hz, preferably between 50 and 400 Hz.
In addition, when the high-frequency peening technology is ultrasound-based, the peening tool may comprise between 1 and 50 needles, preferably between 1 and 5 needles, better just one needle. These needles have a diameter lying between 0.5 and 20 mm and preferably between 1 and 10 mm, and an impact radius lying between 0.25 and 100 mm and preferably between 1 and 10 mm. In this case also, the vibration frequency of the acoustic assembly may lie between 10 kHz and 60 kHz, preferably between 20 kHz and 40 kHz. Still in this case, the vibration amplitude may lie between 5 and 200 μm peak-to-peak, preferably between 15 and 60 μm peak-to-peak.
The robotized system may comprise a counterweight system configured to compensate the weight of the peening tool whatever the orientation thereof. That may thus make it possible to cancel or limit the effect of gravity on the effort applied by the impactor on the treated zone. By virtue of this counterweight system, the effort of the peening effector on the workpiece may be more easily controlled.
The invention will be able to be better understood on reading the following description, of nonlimiting exemplary implementations thereof, and on studying the attached drawing, in which:
In this example, the method comprises a step 1 consisting in defining the initial trajectory of the part or parts of the weld bead which will be treated by peening. The initial trajectory is the trajectory of a peening tool used in the subsequent peening operation. This initial trajectory, which is theoretical, is determined from the numerical model of the workpiece and using, for example, offline programming tools (PHL), or else from the real workpiece by manual learning.
In a step 2, an effector bearing a scanning tool is fixed removably onto a robotized system so as to be able, in a step 3, to control the robotized system provided with the effector bearing the scanning tool so as to scan the weld bead to be treated by following the initial trajectory which was defined in the step 1. The scanner of the weld bead will make it possible to acquire, by virtue of the scanning tool, local data on the relief and position of the weld bead and on the zones of the base surface of the workpiece which are adjacent thereto. A schematic example of curve illustrating the deviation between the plots of the real trajectory and of the initial trajectory has been illustrated in
When the scan of the weld bead is performed, the aim is to obtain, as illustrated in
To perform the scan, the effector bears a scanning tool 30 which may be a contact-based relief and position data acquisition system, for example comprising mechanical feelers, or a contactless relief and position data acquisition system, such as optical sensors, in particular laser or cameras, inductive sensors or capacitive sensors, or another contact-based or contactless location system. In the example illustrated, the effector 35 illustrated in
In a step 4, a post-processing of the acquired data is performed to locate the root P of the weld bead C.
In a step 5 illustrated in
In a step 7, the scanning tool is used again to scan by following the corrected trajectory in order to check, in a step 8 of
Moreover, this step 7 may make it possible to obtain output data illustrated in the box 9 of
When the correction checked in the step 8 is correct, there is a transition to the step 10 of changing of effector so as to fix an effector bearing a peening tool onto the robotized system.
An example of effector 40 bearing a peening tool 41 has been illustrated in
In the example illustrated, the peening technology is ultrasound-based with a vibration amplitude lying between 5 and 200 μm peak-to-peak (p/p). In the example illustrated, as may be seen in particular in
In a step 11, the robotized system is controlled to perform a peening using the peening tool 41 by following the corrected trajectory then the effector is changed again in a step 12 so as to place the effector 35 bearing the scanner tool 30 on the robot.
In a step 13, a new monitoring scan is performed on the peened zone in order, in the step 14, to check the quality of the treatment of the peened zone. If the latter is not correct at least at certain points, denoted “NOK” in
During this monitoring scan of the peened zone, it is also possible to perform a measurement of the geometry of the peened zone, noted in the box 19, and the latter is compared to the measurement of the geometry of the zone before peening 2 of box 9. This comparison may make it possible, if appropriate, in particular if the peening is not satisfactory, to also perform a new peening of all or part of the weld bead by following the steps 16, 17 and 18.
On the other hand, if this comparison and the check culminate in a satisfactory conclusion concerning the peening performed, called “OK”, after repeat peening or not, it is possible to reposition the robotized system to perform a new peening treatment of a weld bead as illustrated in the step 20.
The geometrical measurements taken after peening may comprise data making it possible, by comparison with the geometrical measurements of the box 9, taken before peening, to obtain, as illustrated in
As already indicated, the robotized system 32, illustrated partially in
As illustrated in
The robotized system 32 also comprises, on the effector 40, a compliance 47 provided to maintain the contact between the peening tool 41 and the weld bead C and monitor the contact force. The axis of mobility of the compliance 47 is positioned parallel to the detection axis A resulting from the spatial position of the root and of the bisector. The compliance 47 comprises a passive or active damping means. The calibrated contact force at rest that it seeks to ensure lies between 1N and 500N, better between 2N and 200N and preferentially between 70N and 100N.
In a way that cannot be seen in the drawing in the interests of clarity because it is arranged inside, the robotized system 32 also comprises, in this example, an angular compliance arranged to deflect, if necessary, the peening tool 41 toward the weld bead root to be treated in a plane substantially orthogonal to the bead. The angular compliance in fact allows an angular play of the peening tool 41 lying between 0 and 30°, better between 0 and 5°.
In this case, there is at the same time a monitoring and a peening that are almost simultaneous and point-by-point of the weld bead root qualified as virtually real-time correction.
The method whose steps are illustrated in
If necessary, as illustrated in
As may be seen in
As a variant, in a manner that is not illustrated, the robot or robotized system 32 may be displaced to the zone of the workpiece which is immobile in order to treat certain zones. Finally, as a variant, the robot may be stuck to the immobile piece, being fixed to the latter to treat certain parts thereof.
The peening may consist in treating only certain parts E of a single weld bead C as illustrated in
In this case, the system previously described may treat a single part E or several parts E of one and the same weld bead or of different weld beads. An entire weld bead may also be treated.
The peening produces, from a succession of impacts, a furrow, also called undercut, which is generally quite smooth.
Examples of cutting or abrasive grinding or milling tools 50 that may be used for the grinding effector have been illustrated in
As illustrated in
The weights Pt of the peening tool 41 and Pe of the counterweight 62 are linked by the relationship: Pe=di/d2*Pt. If d1=d2, then Pc=P1.
The counterweight system 60 is configured to compensate the weight of the peening tool 41, whatever its orientation, inclined or straight. The presence of the counterweight system 60 makes it possible to more easily ensure that the peening head applies an effort that is constant during the peening.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1656934 | Jul 2016 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2017/068459 | 7/21/2017 | WO | 00 |