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Toward data-driven research: preliminary study to predict surface roughness in material extrusion using previously published data with machine learning

Fátima García-Martínez (Departamento de Deseño na Enxeñaría, Universidade de Vigo, Ourense, España)
Diego Carou (Departamento de Deseño na Enxeñaría, Universidade de Vigo, Ourense, España)
Francisco de Arriba-Pérez (atlanTTic, Grupo de Tecnoloxías da Información, Universidade de Vigo, Vigo, España)
Silvia García-Méndez (atlanTTic, Grupo de Tecnoloxías da Información, Universidade de Vigo, Vigo, España)

Rapid Prototyping Journal

ISSN: 1355-2546

Article publication date: 16 May 2023

Issue publication date: 10 August 2023

193

Abstract

Purpose

Material extrusion is one of the most commonly used approaches within the additive manufacturing processes available. Despite its popularity and related technical advancements, process reliability and quality assurance remain only partially solved. In particular, the surface roughness caused by this process is a key concern. To solve this constraint, experimental plans have been exploited to optimize surface roughness in recent years. However, the latter empirical trial and error process is extremely time- and resource consuming. Thus, this study aims to avoid using large experimental programs to optimize surface roughness in material extrusion.

Design/methodology/approach

This research provides an in-depth analysis of the effect of several printing parameters: layer height, printing temperature, printing speed and wall thickness. The proposed data-driven predictive modeling approach takes advantage of Machine Learning (ML) models to automatically predict surface roughness based on the data gathered from the literature and the experimental data generated for testing.

Findings

Using ten-fold cross-validation of data gathered from the literature, the proposed ML solution attains a 0.93 correlation with a mean absolute percentage error of 13%. When testing with our own data, the correlation diminishes to 0.79 and the mean absolute percentage error reduces to 8%. Thus, the solution for predicting surface roughness in extrusion-based printing offers competitive results regarding the variability of the analyzed factors.

Research limitations/implications

There are limitations in obtaining large volumes of reliable data, and the variability of the material extrusion process is relatively high.

Originality/value

Although ML is not a novel methodology in additive manufacturing, the use of published data from multiple sources has barely been exploited to train predictive models. As available manufacturing data continue to increase on a daily basis, the ability to learn from these large volumes of data is critical in future manufacturing and science. Specifically, the power of ML helps model surface roughness with limited experimental tests.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

This study was partially supported by the Xunta de Galicia grants ED481B-2021–118 and ED481B-2022–093, Spain. The authors would like to thank Mr Javier Rodríguez and the Laboratorio Oficial de Metrología de Galicia for their support.

Data availability: The data are publicly available [1].

Citation

García-Martínez, F., Carou, D., de Arriba-Pérez, F. and García-Méndez, S. (2023), "Toward data-driven research: preliminary study to predict surface roughness in material extrusion using previously published data with machine learning", Rapid Prototyping Journal, Vol. 29 No. 8, pp. 1640-1652. https://doi.org/10.1108/RPJ-01-2023-0028

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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