WO1997037810A1 - Volumetric feed control for flexible filament - Google Patents

Volumetric feed control for flexible filament Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1997037810A1
WO1997037810A1 PCT/US1997/005590 US9705590W WO9737810A1 WO 1997037810 A1 WO1997037810 A1 WO 1997037810A1 US 9705590 W US9705590 W US 9705590W WO 9737810 A1 WO9737810 A1 WO 9737810A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
feed control
control apparatus
processing unit
central processing
volumetric feed
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1997/005590
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Robert L. Zinniel
John S. Batchelder
Original Assignee
Stratasys, Inc.
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Stratasys, Inc. filed Critical Stratasys, Inc.
Publication of WO1997037810A1 publication Critical patent/WO1997037810A1/en

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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05DSYSTEMS FOR CONTROLLING OR REGULATING NON-ELECTRIC VARIABLES
    • G05D7/00Control of flow
    • G05D7/06Control of flow characterised by the use of electric means
    • G05D7/0605Control of flow characterised by the use of electric means specially adapted for solid materials
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C64/00Additive manufacturing, i.e. manufacturing of three-dimensional [3D] objects by additive deposition, additive agglomeration or additive layering, e.g. by 3D printing, stereolithography or selective laser sintering
    • B29C64/10Processes of additive manufacturing
    • B29C64/106Processes of additive manufacturing using only liquids or viscous materials, e.g. depositing a continuous bead of viscous material
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C64/00Additive manufacturing, i.e. manufacturing of three-dimensional [3D] objects by additive deposition, additive agglomeration or additive layering, e.g. by 3D printing, stereolithography or selective laser sintering
    • B29C64/10Processes of additive manufacturing
    • B29C64/106Processes of additive manufacturing using only liquids or viscous materials, e.g. depositing a continuous bead of viscous material
    • B29C64/118Processes of additive manufacturing using only liquids or viscous materials, e.g. depositing a continuous bead of viscous material using filamentary material being melted, e.g. fused deposition modelling [FDM]
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H51/00Forwarding filamentary material
    • B65H51/30Devices controlling the forwarding speed to synchronise with supply, treatment, or take-up apparatus
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H63/00Warning or safety devices, e.g. automatic fault detectors, stop-motions ; Quality control of the package
    • B65H63/08Warning or safety devices, e.g. automatic fault detectors, stop-motions ; Quality control of the package responsive to delivery of a measured length of material, completion of winding of a package, or filling of a receptacle
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H2511/00Dimensions; Position; Numbers; Identification; Occurrences
    • B65H2511/10Size; Dimensions
    • B65H2511/14Diameter, e.g. of roll or package
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H2513/00Dynamic entities; Timing aspects
    • B65H2513/10Speed
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65HHANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL, e.g. SHEETS, WEBS, CABLES
    • B65H2701/00Handled material; Storage means
    • B65H2701/30Handled filamentary material
    • B65H2701/31Textiles threads or artificial strands of filaments

Definitions

  • the filament is preferably made of a material that
  • waxes include waxes, thermoplastic resins, and various metals.
  • tolerance limits imposed on build material elements by the current technology are in the area
  • the build material element is in the form of a cylindrical
  • the machine may plug or the part become corrupted. Also in current systems, the accuracy of the model created is dependent upon the accuracy of the filament supply. When the filament varies in cross section, the volume of material delivered
  • the three-dimensional modeling machines of the current art use flexible filament, often stored on a roll, that is fed to an application tip by the use of feed rollers.
  • Adjustment of the feed controller for solder wire thickness is done manually, and only for a nominal diameter.
  • Sensors in the receptacle are of variable type, including photoelectric
  • the sensors determine the volume of yarn in the receptacle.
  • Wroclawski et al. rotates at a constant speed.
  • the variable yarn winding speed is
  • Wroclawski et al. discloses no monitoring or sensing of the diameter of the yarn to control feed speed.
  • the feed speed of the yarn is constant.
  • liquid in an IV tube is calculated by timing circuits activated by photoelectric sensors to
  • volumetric flow rate is
  • Such an apparatus should be adaptable to be added to an existing machine, as well as added at the manufacturing stage.
  • Patent No. 5, 121 ,329 to Crump which is hereby inco ⁇ orated by reference, and which will
  • the present invention achieves these objects by providing a system for continuously measuring, computing, and monitoring the effective cross section of a build material element
  • such as a filament as the element is fed to the melting unit or application tip of the modeling
  • Build material element is fed to a modeling machine by an advancement mechanism including a motor.
  • the motor can be a stepper motor or a DC servo motor.
  • the build element is advanced to the dispensing head by the advancement
  • the effective cross section of the element is determined through the use of
  • sensing means and a central processing unit.
  • Various configurations for determination of effective cross section may be used, for example infrared emitter and detector pairs, tungsten filament and infrared detector arrays, pinch rollers and linear variable differential transformers
  • the sensing means are provided to the central processing unit.
  • the sensing means are provided to the central processing unit.
  • the motor of the advancement mechanism is connected to the central processing unit to allow the central processing unit to know the speed of the motor at
  • the effective cross section of the element may be
  • the proper times to effect the changes in speed may therefore be controlled by the central processing unit to ensure that the lag response is continuously and properly compensated.
  • the volumetric feed control apparatus of the present invention will allow the tolerance
  • the filament diameter accuracy level required by the present invention is less than that previously required by the prior art.
  • the reason for this is the use of more accurate methods of providing a constant flow rate of
  • the central processing unit may be located
  • the build material element is configured in the shape of a cylindrical filament, normally wound on a spool or stored in a roll.
  • the element may be
  • the build material element may also be supplied in discrete quantities, and need not be wound on a spool.
  • Fig. 1 is a perspective view of an embodiment of the volumetric feed control in place on a
  • Fig. 2 is a view of an embodiment of the sensing system of Fig. 1 , taken along line 2-2
  • Fig. 3 is a view of an alternative embodiment of the sensing system of Fig. 2;
  • Fig. 4 is a view of another alternative embodiment of the sensing system of Fig. 2;
  • Fig. 5 is a view of yet another alternative embodiment of the sensing system of Fig. 2; and
  • Fig. 6 is a partial block diagram of a control system for the volumetric feed control.
  • Fig. 1 shows the volumetric feed control 10 in place on a three-dimensional modeling machine 12, the machine 12 having an element advancement mechanism such as feed rollers 14, a dispensing head 16 with an application tip 17, and a frame 18.
  • a build material element such as filament 20 is fed to machine 12 from a build
  • element source not shown, which may be a spool or roll of material, or another such storage
  • Build material is often formed as a filament such as filament 20, but may take other
  • Such other configurations include those of different cross sections. Further,
  • the build material element may be supplied in discrete quantities, and need not be wound in a roll or on a spool.
  • Volumetric feed control 10 may include dimension control ring 22 and DC servo motor 24 with encoder feedback.
  • Dimension control ring 22 contains sensing means 23 to determine
  • Cross sectional area is often used to estimate volume. Also used are diameter
  • section is a measurement that takes into account such factors as the cross sectional area of the
  • the sensing means 23 is operatively connected to a central processing unit 74, and continuously gathers data and feeds information
  • the central processing unit is also operatively connected to a motor 24, which may be a DC servo motor or a stepper motor.
  • Motor 24 is in turn operatively connected to feed rollers 14 or an other element advancement mechanism which may be used on the modeling
  • the central processing unit 74 controls the speed at which the motor 24 turns, and
  • Central processing unit 74 adjusts the speed
  • Sensing means 23 need not be housed in a dimension control ring 22. It may be
  • Sensing means 23 is preferably positioned between any driving contact means such as feed rollers 14 and the application tip 17. This is because the driving contact means may affect the effective cross section of the element due to forces imparted by the feed rollers 14 or other
  • Sensing means 23 may even be inco ⁇ orated into the element
  • advancement mechanism such as by mounting the feed rollers to communicate with a linear variable differential transformer as described below.
  • Figs. 2-4 various embodiments of the sensing means 23 may be seen.
  • filament 20 is shown substantially centered in dimension control ring 22.
  • dimension control ring 22 is not required.
  • the sensing means 23 may be mounted elsewhere. Although in this configuration it is preferred that filament 20 be centered in dimension control ring 22, it is not necessary.
  • a tungsten halogen lamp
  • the emitted light 34 from the lamp 26 creates a shadow of the filament 20 on a linear CCD array 36.
  • the shadow width is designated as letter A (Fig. 2).
  • Shadows of different widths A will cause a variation in the number of array pixels 38 that are
  • the width 21 of filament 20 may then be
  • a sensing means 23 using a three-coil linear variable differential transformer (LVDT) 40 and a pair of dimension rollers 42 is shown.
  • Dimension rollers 42 are
  • Each shaft 44 is flexibly attached to rigid mount 46 by a suitable
  • Rigid mount 46 is attached to the interior surface 72 of
  • the dimension control ring 22 may also be attached at any fixed point on the frame of the
  • the dimension rollers 42 are biased toward each other by spring 50
  • Each shaft 44 also carries an attachment for LVDT 40 which is
  • LVDT 40 The terminals of LVDT 40 are operatively connected to rollers 42, one terminal to each roller.
  • tf oilers 42 may be used with multiple functions, such as to also serve as feed rollers for eicment advancement, or encoding the
  • Filament 20 passes between dimension rollers 42. As the filament diameter changes, the dimension rollers 42 respond by moving, causing motion of the shafts 44. The movements of the dimension rollers 42 cause the core 52 of LVDT 40 to change position within LVDT
  • Sense circuits known in the art may be employed to translate the relative changes in core 52 position and inductance in the LVDT coils to an analog voltage which may be used to compute the effective cross section of the filament 20.
  • Fig. 4 shows a third embodiment of the sensing means 23 used in the dimension control ring 22 or alternatively mountable directly to the modeling machine.
  • the filament effective cross section is calculated using information from a capacitive sensor 54.
  • the sensor 54 is comprised of a pair of conducting plates 56 sandwiching a thin insulator 58
  • a typical insulator 58 is mylar, approximately 0.002 inches in thickness. Insulator 58 lies in a plane 60 through which a hole 62 is drilled, the hole 62 being coaxial
  • the diameter 64 of hole 62 is slightly larger than the diameter of the largest
  • a capacitance meter 66 is attached to the conductive plates 56. Changing diameter of the filament 20 will cause a change in capacitance that may be translated in known fashion to the cross sectional area of the
  • measurement scheme may also be used to detect the presence of absorbed water in the filament
  • sensing means 23 comprises at least
  • emitter/ detector pairs 68, 70 spaced 180 degrees apart around the axis of the filament 20.
  • the emitter/detector pair 68, 70 is situated so that the filament 20 will pass
  • emitter 68 sends out a light signal or beam that may be partially occluded by filament 20 and
  • the filament 20 changes in size, the intensity of the beam detected by the detector 70 will change, allowing a measurement which may be
  • a plurality of emitter/detector pairs are spaced at equal intervals around the axis of filament 20 in order to more accurately
  • Such other sensors include but are not limited to opto-electric sensors, miniature CCD cameras, fiber optic sensors, mechanical
  • bladder ring sensors or pinch roller sensors. All could send information that may be used to
  • the various sensing means 23 described above each send a signal corresponding to the
  • the central processing unit 74 has a central processing unit 74 and a filament effective cross section to central processing unit 74.
  • two or more sensing means may be combined or used in sequence to determine multiple properties of the filament 20 and provide a reference for averaging
  • an LVDT sensing means as described above may be used along with a capacitive sensor as also described above, in order to determine both the outer
  • the element advancement mechanism itself often requires a groove such as that shown in Fig. 3 on rollers 42 in order to seat the build material element properly.
  • the element advancement mechanism may
  • Build material elements may be fabricated in a variety of cross sectional shapes and
  • the volumetric feed control 10 works as follows.
  • the sensing means 23 sends measurement signals to central processing unit 74.
  • Central processing unit 74 uses the
  • central processing unit 74 is able to adjust the feed speed of the build
  • a time lag exists between the computation of build element effective cross section and the arrival of the particular measured portion of the element at the application tip 17.
  • the central processing unit 74 To account for this lag, the central processing unit 74 must know the distance 76
  • the connection of motor 24 to the central processing unit allows it to know or compute at all times both the effective cross section of the build element and the speed of the feed rollers 14.

Abstract

A volumetric feed control apparatus (10) for a build material element such as a filament (20) used in a three-dimensional modeling machine (12) having an application tip (17) includes a pair of feed rollers (14) feeding the filament (20) to the application tip (17), and a sensor or sensor system (23) feeding information to a central processing unit (74) that continuously computes the effective cross section of the filament (20) using the signals received from the sensor or sensor system (23). The central processing unit (74) controls the speed of a DC servo or stepper motor (24) which in turn rotates the feed rollers (14) to advance the filament (20) toward the application tip (17) of the modeling machine (12). The central processing unit (74) adjusts the speed of the feed rollers (14) to supply a constant flow of material to the application tip (17). Alternatively, the sensor system (23) can be incorporated into the feed rollers (14), eliminating the need for further space constraints.

Description

VOLUMETRIC FEED CONTROL FOR FLEXIBLE FILAMENT
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to the field of forming three-dimensional
objects. Specifically it relates to volumetric feed control of a build material element in three-
dimensional modeling.
Three-dimensional modeling machines in the current art often use build elements made
from a build material such as a filament, often wound on a roll, that are fed to the machine by the use of feed rollers or other devices. In the modeling machine, the material is melted
before being dispensed at an application tip. The filament is preferably made of a material that
will rapidly solidify upon a small drop in its temperature. Materials often used for modeling
include waxes, thermoplastic resins, and various metals.
Build material elements have varying configurations, but typical elements used in the
field of three-dimensional modeling must currently be manufactured to a high degree of
accuracy due to the tolerance limits imposed by current modeling machine technology. The
tolerance limits imposed on build material elements by the current technology are in the area
of 4 per cent of volume. Typically, the build material element is in the form of a cylindrical
filament approximately 0.070 inches in diameter, with a required tolerance of +/- 0.0015 inches. In current modeling systems using this filament, if the filament exceeds tolerance by
either being too large or too small, the machine may plug or the part become corrupted. Also in current systems, the accuracy of the model created is dependent upon the accuracy of the filament supply. When the filament varies in cross section, the volume of material delivered
to the application tip of the machine does not remain constant, and therefore the flow rate of
material fluctuates. When the filament is too large, there may be a build-up of excess filament at the application tip, resulting in a model layer that is too thick. Similarly, when the filament
is too small, there may be a shortfall or lag of filament at the application tip, resulting in a
deposited layer that is too thin, or that leaves gaps in the model. Both situations may easily
lead to model failure. An uncontrolled flow rate, even when the fluctuations are small, can contribute to large variations in the quality of the final model, including gaps and excess
thickness.
The three-dimensional modeling machines of the current art use flexible filament, often stored on a roll, that is fed to an application tip by the use of feed rollers. Although attempts
have been made at constant volumetric control of melted filament at the application tip,
proposed solutions have not controlled the problem enough to allow a tolerance level change in the filament used. An excess of material leads to overthick layers, and a shortfall leads to
unacceptable gap or thin wall errors in modeling.
Various prior art designs for automatic feed control and variable speed feeding exist. For example, U.S. Patent No. 3,017,060 to Miller discloses an automatic feed control mechanism for wire filaments. Miller teaches an intermittent feed of the filament, the filament
having segments of varying cross-sectional area. No continuous measuring of the wire
diameter, cross sectional area, or effective cross section is taught by Miller. No continuous adjustment of filament feed speed in response to changes in wire diameter is taught by Miller. U.S. Patent No. 4,932,581 to Ohle et al. discloses the controlled speed feeding of a predetermined length of solder wire to a soldering location. Ohle et al. uses force sensors to
determine feed force or speed by converting force to a proportional electric signal controlling an electric motor. Ohle et al. does not teach any type of sensing device for measuring the
diameter, cross sectional area, or effective cross section of the solder wire. Adjustment of the feed controller for solder wire thickness is done manually, and only for a nominal diameter.
No adjustments are made due to any variance from nominal diameter.
Several patents disclose various devices to control feeding of fibers or yarn. For example, U.S. Patent No. 4,019,691 to Wroclawski et al. discloses winding of yarn onto a
bobbin at a variable and controlled speed. The speed is dependent upon the volume of yarn
held in a receptacle. Sensors in the receptacle are of variable type, including photoelectric
sensors. The sensors determine the volume of yarn in the receptacle. The winding shaft in
Wroclawski et al. rotates at a constant speed. The variable yarn winding speed is
accomplished by use of a cone-shaped bobbin. A different contact point on the bobbin results
in a different yarn winding speed. Wroclawski et al. discloses no monitoring or sensing of the diameter of the yarn to control feed speed. The feed speed of the yarn is constant.
U.S. Patent No. 4,820,281 to Lawler, Jr. discloses measurement of the volume of a
drop of liquid and control means for regulating flow of a liquid. The volume of drops of
liquid in an IV tube is calculated by timing circuits activated by photoelectric sensors to
measure the time it takes for the drop to fall a known distance. Volumetric flow rate is
determined by multiplying drop volume and drop rate, and is adjusted according to a predetermined flow rate. No continuous feeding of a solid element is taught by Lawler, Jr.
No continuous monitoring of diameter, cross sectional area, or effective cross section of a
filament is taught by Lawler, Jr. The teaching of Lawler, Jr. is unworkable when dealing with
solids.
It would be desirable to provide an apparatus for continuous volumetric control of build
material fed to the extrusion head of a three-dimensional modeling machine. Such an apparatus should be adaptable to be added to an existing machine, as well as added at the manufacturing stage.
BRTEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the present invention to provide a volumetric feed control system that
will allow for an increased tolerance range in build element effective cross section, in other
words, a loosening of the strictness of the tolerance requirements.
It is another object of the present invention to improve the constancy of the flow rate
of fluid delivered through the application tip of a three-dimensional modeling machine.
It is yet anotner object of the present invention to provide a feed control system suitable
for installation on an existing three-dimensional modeler including the type disclosed in U.S.
Patent No. 5, 121 ,329 to Crump, which is hereby incoφorated by reference, and which will
require little modification of existing equipment. The present invention achieves these objects by providing a system for continuously measuring, computing, and monitoring the effective cross section of a build material element
such as a filament as the element is fed to the melting unit or application tip of the modeling
machine, and adjusting the speed at which the element is fed to the melting unit or the
application tip to ensure a more constant flow rate of fluid at the application tip.
Build material element is fed to a modeling machine by an advancement mechanism including a motor. The motor can be a stepper motor or a DC servo motor. In the present invention, the build element is advanced to the dispensing head by the advancement
mechanism. The effective cross section of the element is determined through the use of
sensing means and a central processing unit. Various configurations for determination of effective cross section may be used, for example infrared emitter and detector pairs, tungsten filament and infrared detector arrays, pinch rollers and linear variable differential transformers
(LVDT), and capacitive measurement.
There is usually a spatial gap between the sensing means and the application tip of the three-dimensional modeler. Therefore, a lag response exists in the system. A variance in
filament cross section will not immediately affect the volume of filament material present at the application tip. To combat this delay, the distances between the sensing means and the
application tip as well as between the sensing means and the center of the modeler
advancement mechanism are provided to the central processing unit. The sensing means
provide continuous signals to the central processing unit which can then compute the effective
cross section of the filament. The motor of the advancement mechanism is connected to the central processing unit to allow the central processing unit to know the speed of the motor at
all times. Since the central processing unit knows the speed of the motor and receives measurements from the sensing means, the effective cross section of the element may be
continuously computed. Necessary changes to motor speed and hence feed roller speed and
the proper times to effect the changes in speed may therefore be controlled by the central processing unit to ensure that the lag response is continuously and properly compensated.
The volumetric feed control apparatus of the present invention will allow the tolerance
of flexible filament to be increased. In other words, the filament diameter accuracy level required by the present invention is less than that previously required by the prior art. The reason for this is the use of more accurate methods of providing a constant flow rate of
filament to the modeling machine application tip. This relaxed tolerance requirement will considerably cut the manufacturing costs of filament, and therefore of models created by
modeling machines.
Further, any existing system using a roller feed method of feeding a flexible filament
to a modeler may easily use the present invention. Insertion of the sensing means into an existing system may be easily accomplished. The central processing unit may be located
anywhere, provided that proper connections are made to the sensors and to the motor controlling the advancement mechanism. No changes other than the drive control of the
motor, and the possible addition of an encoder f edback to the motor are necessary.
Typically, the build material element is configured in the shape of a cylindrical filament, normally wound on a spool or stored in a roll. However, the element may be
supplied in a wide variety of configurations, including ribbons, tubes, extrusions of triangular,
trapezoidal, or pentagonal shape, and the like. The build material element may also be supplied in discrete quantities, and need not be wound on a spool.
These and other objects and benefits of the present invention will become apparent from
the following detailed description thereof taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate like elements throughout the several
views.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Fig. 1 is a perspective view of an embodiment of the volumetric feed control in place on a
machine;
Fig. 2 is a view of an embodiment of the sensing system of Fig. 1 , taken along line 2-2
thereof;
Fig. 3 is a view of an alternative embodiment of the sensing system of Fig. 2; Fig. 4 is a view of another alternative embodiment of the sensing system of Fig. 2; Fig. 5 is a view of yet another alternative embodiment of the sensing system of Fig. 2; and
Fig. 6 is a partial block diagram of a control system for the volumetric feed control.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to the drawings, Fig. 1 shows the volumetric feed control 10 in place on a three-dimensional modeling machine 12, the machine 12 having an element advancement mechanism such as feed rollers 14, a dispensing head 16 with an application tip 17, and a frame 18. A build material element such as filament 20 is fed to machine 12 from a build
element source, not shown, which may be a spool or roll of material, or another such storage
device. Build material is often formed as a filament such as filament 20, but may take other
configurations. Such other configurations include those of different cross sections. Further,
the build material element may be supplied in discrete quantities, and need not be wound in a roll or on a spool.
Volumetric feed control 10 may include dimension control ring 22 and DC servo motor 24 with encoder feedback. Dimension control ring 22 contains sensing means 23 to determine
the effective cross section of a build material element such as filament 20 being fed through
the dimension control ring 22.
Cross sectional area is often used to estimate volume. Also used are diameter
measurements. These methods of determining volume only work when no anomalies are
present. Such methods of measurement, especially using conventional instruments and techniques, fail to take into account that if only a diameter measurement is made, a volume computation is meaningless if the element being measured is hollow. The effective cross
section is a measurement that takes into account such factors as the cross sectional area of the
element, known quantities such as length, width, and diameter, and other information, such
as whether the element is hollow, oblong, or the like. The use of effective cross section
reduces the possibility for miscalculation due to various physical factors of the element. A
more accurate volume calculation may then be made. The sensing means 23 is operatively connected to a central processing unit 74, and continuously gathers data and feeds information
signals measuring the build material element being fed therethrough to the central processing
unit 74. The central processing unit is also operatively connected to a motor 24, which may be a DC servo motor or a stepper motor. Motor 24 is in turn operatively connected to feed rollers 14 or an other element advancement mechanism which may be used on the modeling
machine. The central processing unit 74 controls the speed at which the motor 24 turns, and
therefore the speed at which the advancement mechanism rotates to pull the build material element through the dimension control ring 22. Central processing unit 74 adjusts the speed
of motor 24 in order to provide a constant flow rate of build material element to dispensing
head 16 and application tip 17.
Sensing means 23 need not be housed in a dimension control ring 22. It may be
mounted at any place in which it will be positioned to make measurements on element 20.
Sensing means 23 is preferably positioned between any driving contact means such as feed rollers 14 and the application tip 17. This is because the driving contact means may affect the effective cross section of the element due to forces imparted by the feed rollers 14 or other
mechanical driving means. Sensing means 23 may even be incoφorated into the element
advancement mechanism, such as by mounting the feed rollers to communicate with a linear variable differential transformer as described below.
Referring now also to Figs. 2-4, various embodiments of the sensing means 23 may be seen. In Fig. 2, filament 20 is shown substantially centered in dimension control ring 22. As has been mentioned, dimension control ring 22 is not required. The sensing means 23 may be mounted elsewhere. Although in this configuration it is preferred that filament 20 be centered in dimension control ring 22, it is not necessary. In Fig. 2, a tungsten halogen lamp
26 is oriented with its lamp filament 28 parallel to and a fixed predetermined distance 30 from
the axis 32 of filament 20. The emitted light 34 from the lamp 26 creates a shadow of the filament 20 on a linear CCD array 36. The shadow width is designated as letter A (Fig. 2).
Shadows of different widths A will cause a variation in the number of array pixels 38 that are
illuminated by the light 34 from lamp 26. The width 21 of filament 20 may then be
determined using standard clocking and preamplification techniques known in the art and not further described herein. These measurements are used to generate an effective cross section
of filament 20.
Referring to Fig. 3, a sensing means 23 using a three-coil linear variable differential transformer (LVDT) 40 and a pair of dimension rollers 42 is shown. Dimension rollers 42 are
mounted to shafts 44. Each shaft 44 is flexibly attached to rigid mount 46 by a suitable
mounting apparatus, such as pins 48. Rigid mount 46 is attached to the interior surface 72 of
the dimension control ring 22, but may also be attached at any fixed point on the frame of the
modeling machine. The dimension rollers 42 are biased toward each other by spring 50
attached between shafts 44. Each shaft 44 also carries an attachment for LVDT 40 which is
attached therebetween. The terminals of LVDT 40 are operatively connected to rollers 42, one terminal to each roller. As has been described above, tf oilers 42 may be used with multiple functions, such as to also serve as feed rollers for eicment advancement, or encoding the
element velocity. Filament 20 passes between dimension rollers 42. As the filament diameter changes, the dimension rollers 42 respond by moving, causing motion of the shafts 44. The movements of the dimension rollers 42 cause the core 52 of LVDT 40 to change position within LVDT
40. Sense circuits known in the art may be employed to translate the relative changes in core 52 position and inductance in the LVDT coils to an analog voltage which may be used to compute the effective cross section of the filament 20.
Fig. 4 shows a third embodiment of the sensing means 23 used in the dimension control ring 22 or alternatively mountable directly to the modeling machine. In this embodiment, the filament effective cross section is calculated using information from a capacitive sensor 54.
The sensor 54 is comprised of a pair of conducting plates 56 sandwiching a thin insulator 58
therebetween. A typical insulator 58 is mylar, approximately 0.002 inches in thickness. Insulator 58 lies in a plane 60 through which a hole 62 is drilled, the hole 62 being coaxial
with the axis 32 of build filament 20 and coplanar with plane 60, and exposing the conductive
plates 56. The diameter 64 of hole 62 is slightly larger than the diameter of the largest
filament 20 expected to be used with the modeling machine. A capacitance meter 66 is attached to the conductive plates 56. Changing diameter of the filament 20 will cause a change in capacitance that may be translated in known fashion to the cross sectional area of the
filament. This method of determining the effective cross section of the filament 20 is independent of its cross sectional shape, since the capacitive sensor 54 essentially measures the
percentage of the hole 62 that is filled with filament 20 as opposed to air. The capacitance
measurement scheme may also be used to detect the presence of absorbed water in the filament
20, since the filament 20 material and water have different capacitive properties. Yet another alternative embodiment (Fig. 5) of the sensing means 23 comprises at least
one set of emitter/ detector pairs 68, 70 spaced 180 degrees apart around the axis of the filament 20. The emitter/detector pair 68, 70 is situated so that the filament 20 will pass
through the beam from emitter 68 as the filament 20 is advanced by feed rollers 14. The
emitter 68 sends out a light signal or beam that may be partially occluded by filament 20 and
which is detected by the opposite detector 70. If the filament 20 changes in size, the intensity of the beam detected by the detector 70 will change, allowing a measurement which may be
used to calculate the filament effective cross section. Preferably, a plurality of emitter/detector pairs are spaced at equal intervals around the axis of filament 20 in order to more accurately
detect and measure the effective cross section of the filament 20 as it is advanced by the
advancement mechanism.
Other types of sensors are also compatible with the volumetric feed control 10, and
could be used in place of the emitter/detector pairs. Such other sensors include but are not limited to opto-electric sensors, miniature CCD cameras, fiber optic sensors, mechanical
bladder ring sensors, or pinch roller sensors. All could send information that may be used to
determine the effective cross section of the flexible filament to the central processing unit 74.
The various sensing means 23 described above each send a signal corresponding to the
filament effective cross section to central processing unit 74. The central processing unit 74
computes the effective cross section and the required feed speed of the filament 20 to provide a constant flow rate of build material to the application tip 17 of the dispensing head 16, and
adjusts the speed of motor 24 which controls the speed of filament feed by controlling the speed of the advancement mechanism such as feed rollers 14. This adjustment ensures that any changes in the effective cross section of the filament 20 will result in a corresponding change
in the speed at which the filament 20 is fed.
If further accuracy of effective cross section measurement and testing of properties of
the filament 20 is desired, two or more sensing means may be combined or used in sequence to determine multiple properties of the filament 20 and provide a reference for averaging
computed values. For example, an LVDT sensing means as described above may be used along with a capacitive sensor as also described above, in order to determine both the outer
dimension and the water content of the filament 20. Consequently, the tolerance of a filament
with nominal diameter of 0.070 inches can be increased substantially from +/- 0.0015 inches.
Another way to increase the accuracy of the effective cross section is to more closely monitor the effective velocity of the element. Although the rotational speed imparted by the
element advancement mechanism provides a good approximation of the element velocity, the
approximation may be in error due to a number of factors. The element advancement mechanism itself often requires a groove such as that shown in Fig. 3 on rollers 42 in order to seat the build material element properly. The angular velocity of the rollers and accordingly
the linear velocity imparted by the rollers differs at the outer periphery and at the central most portion of the groove. To combat such inaccuracies, the element advancement mechanism may
be encoded for element velocity. When such an account is made of effective element velocity,
this measure may be combined with effective cross section to more accurately compute the volumetric flow rate. Build material elements may be fabricated in a variety of cross sectional shapes and
geometries, including ribbons, tubes, extrusions of triangles, trapezoids, pentagons, and other
polyhedra. The measurement techniques described above may be adapted to these alternative geometries.
In operation, the volumetric feed control 10 works as follows. The sensing means 23 sends measurement signals to central processing unit 74. Central processing unit 74 uses the
signals to continuously compute the effective cross section of the build element. In response to this known quantity, central processing unit 74 is able to adjust the feed speed of the build
element by adjusting the speed of motor 24 controlling the feed rollers 14 that advance the build element toward the dispensing head 16 and application tip 17. The adjustment is made
so that a constant flow rate of build material is fed to the dispensing head 16.
A time lag exists between the computation of build element effective cross section and the arrival of the particular measured portion of the element at the application tip 17.
Consequently, a change in effective cross section of the build element at the sensing means 23
does not immediately translate to a change in volume of material at the application tip 17. The
change in build element effective cross section will affect the volume of material at the
application tip at some point in time after it passes the sensing means 23.
To account for this lag, the central processing unit 74 must know the distance 76
between the application tip 17 and the sensing means 23, as well as the distance 78 between the sensing means 23 and the center of feed rollers 14. The connection of motor 24 to the central processing unit allows it to know or compute at all times both the effective cross section of the build element and the speed of the feed rollers 14. The central processing unit
74 can therefore correct for the lag response in the system and provide a constant volume of material at the application tip 17 regardless of variances in the effective cross section of the build element.
The detailed description outlined above is considered to be illustrative only of the principles of the invention. Numerous changes and modifications will occur to those skilled in the art, and there is no intention to restrict the scope of the invention to the detailed description. The preferred embodiment of the invention having been described in detail, the
scope of the invention should be defined by the following claims.

Claims

WHAT IS CLAIMED IS:
1. A volumetric feed control apparatus for a build material element of a three-
dimensional modeling machine having an element advancement mechanism and an application
tip, comprising: means, positionable to be in sensing relation with the element, for sensing effective cross section data of the element and for generating measurement signals corresponding thereto;
a central processing unit operatively connected to said sensing means, and receiving said measurement signals therefrom, said central processing unit using said
signals to continuously compute the effective cross section of the element; and
drive means connectable to the element advancement mechanism for controlling the
speed of the element advancement mechanism, said drive means operatively connected to said central processing unit, said central processing unit
continuously controlling the speed of said drive means.
2. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein said sensing
means comprises:
a hght emitting source;
a hght detector; and said light emitting source and said light detector positioned fa iig each other approximately 180 degrees apart with the axis of the element therebetween.
3. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 2, wherein said
sensing means further comprises:
a second light emitting source; a second light detector; said second hght emitting source and said second light detector positioned facing each other approximately 180 degrees apart with the axis of the element
therebetween; and said first light emitting source and said second light emitting source spaced
approximately 90 degrees apart.
4. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein said sensing means comprises a fiber optic sensor.
5. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein said sensing
means comprises an optical sensor.
6. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein said sensing
means comprises a miniature CCD camera.
7. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein said sensing
means comprises a bladder ring surrounding the filament circumferentially, said bladder ring expanding and contracting as the cross section of said filament changes.
8. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein: said sensing means is a plurality of sensor pairs, each comprising:
a light emitting source and a light detector spaced approximately 180 degrees
apart; and
said sensor pairs being disposed around the axis of the element at even intervals.
9. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein said drive
means is a DC servo motor.
10. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 9 wherein:
said DC servo motor has an encoder feedback; and said encoder feedback continuously provides said central processing unit with the speed
of said servo motor.
11. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein said drive
means is a stepper motor.
12. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 wherein said central
processing unit continuously computes the delay for compensation of the lag gap between said sensing means and the element advancement mechanism and said central processing unit
adjusts the speed of said drive means to compensate for the gap delay.
13. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 , wherein said sensing means comprises: a light source disposed a predetermined distance from the axis of the element: and
a linear CCD array disposed on the opposite side of the element axis.
1 . A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 13, wherein said light
source is a tungsten halogen lamp.
15. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1, wherein said sensing means comprises:
a rigid mount attachable to the modeling machine adjacent the axis of the element; a pair of shafts flexibly attached to said rigid mount;
a pair of rollers, a said roller attached to each said shaft; a spring attached between said shafts; and
a linear variable differential transformer having terminals, said transformer attached to said shafts therebetween, a terminal attached to each said roller.
16. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 , wherein said sensing means comprises: a capacitive sensor comprising:
a pair of conducting plates;
an insulator disposed between said plates;
said capacitive sensor having a bore therethrough coplanar with said insulator, said bore exposing said conducting plates; and a capacitance meter having terminals, a said terminal attached to each conducting plate.
17. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 16, wherein said
insulator is mylar.
18. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 17, wherein said mylar is approximately 0.002 inches in thickness.
19. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 , wherein said sensing means is disposed between the application tip and the element advancement
mechanism.
20. A volumetric feed control apparatus as described in claim 1 , and further
comprising: encoder means operatively connected to said central processing unit and connectable
to the element advancement mechanism, for sensing the effective element velocity and generating velocity signals corresponding thereto, said central
processing unit receiving said velocity signals and using said velocity signals
and said measurement signals to compute the volumetric flow rate.
21. An adjustable element flow rate three-dimensional modeling machine,
comprising:
a frame; sensing means disposed adjacent the axis of the element, said sensing means capable
of measuring the effective cross section of the element; and of generating
measurement signals thereof; a dispensing head attached to said frame, having an application tip and an element
melting unit; means, attached to said frame, for contacting the element and advancing the element to said dispensing head; a central processing unit operatively connected to said sensing means, and receiving
said measurement signals therefrom, said central processing unit using said
signals to continuously compute the effective cross section of the element;
drive means operatively connected between said central processing unit and said
advancement means, said drive means controlling the speed of said
advancement means, and said central processing unit continuously controlling the speed of said drive means in response to the computed effective cross section of the element so as to feed the element to said application tip at a known flow rate.
22. An adjustable element flow rate three-dimensional modeling machine as
described in claim 21, wherein said drive means is a DC servo motor with encoder feedback, said encoder feedback continuously supplying the motor speed to said central processing unit.
23. An adjustable element flow rate three-dimensional modeling machine as described in claim 21 , wherein said drive means is a stepper motor.
PCT/US1997/005590 1996-04-08 1997-04-03 Volumetric feed control for flexible filament WO1997037810A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/629,268 US6085957A (en) 1996-04-08 1996-04-08 Volumetric feed control for flexible filament
US08/629,268 1996-04-08

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Publication Number Publication Date
WO1997037810A1 true WO1997037810A1 (en) 1997-10-16

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