Towards additive manufacturing oriented geometric modeling using implicit functions

  • Qingde Li*
  • , Qingqi Hong
  • , Quan Qi
  • , Xinhui Ma
  • , Xie Han
  • , Jie Tian
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Surface-based geometric modeling has many advantages in terms of visualization and traditional subtractive manufacturing using computer-numerical-control cutting-machine tools. However, it is not an ideal solution for additive manufacturing because to digitally print a surface-represented geometric object using a certain additive manufacturing technology, the object has to be converted into a solid representation. However, converting a known surface-based geometric representation into a printable representation is essentially a redesign process, and this is especially the case, when its interior material structure needs to be considered. To specify a 3D geometric object that is ready to be digitally manufactured, its representation has to be in a certain volumetric form. In this research, we show how some of the difficulties experienced in additive manufacturing can be easily solved by using implicitly represented geometric objects. Like surface-based geometric representation is subtractive manufacturing-friendly, implicitly described geometric objects are additive manufacturing-friendly: implicit shapes are 3D printing ready. The implicit geometric representation allows to combine a geometric shape, material colors, an interior material structure, and other required attributes in one single description as a set of implicit functions, and no conversion is needed. In addition, as implicit objects are typically specified procedurally, very little data is used in their specifications, which makes them particularly useful for design and visualization with modern cloud-based mobile devices, which usually do not have very big storage spaces. Finally, implicit modeling is a design procedure that is parallel computing-friendly, as the design of a complex geometric object can be divided into a set of simple shape-designing tasks, owing to the availability of shape-preserving implicit blending operations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9
JournalVisual Computing for Industry, Biomedicine, and Art
Volume1
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • 3D printing-friendly CAD
  • Additive manufacturing
  • Function-based shape modeling
  • Implicit function
  • Implicit modeling
  • Isosurface
  • Level-set

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