Design for additive manufacturing (DFAM) provides design freedom for creating complex geometries and guides designers to ensure the manufacturability of parts fabricated using additive manufacturing (AM) processes. However, there is a lack of formalized DFAM knowledge that provides information on how to design parts and how to plan AM processes for achieving target goals. Furthermore, the wide variety of AM processes, materials, and machines creates challenges in determining manufacturability constraints. Therefore, this study presents a DFAM ontology using the web ontology language (OWL) to semantically model DFAM knowledge and retrieve that knowledge. The goal of the proposed DFAM ontology is to provide a structure for information on part design, AM processes, and AM capability to represent design rules. Furthermore, the manufacturing feature concept is introduced to indicate design features that are considerably constrained by given AM processes. After developing the DFAM ontology, queries based on design rules are represented to explicitly retrieve DFAM knowledge and analyze manufacturability using Semantic Query-enhanced Web Rule Language (SQWRL). The SQWRL rules enable effective reasoning to evaluate design features against manufacturing constraints. The usefulness of the DFAM ontology is demonstrated in a case study where design features of a bracket are selected as manufacturing features based on a rule development process. This study contributes to developing a reusable and upgradable knowledge base that can be used to perform manufacturing analysis.
In order to improve the efficiency of disassembly and product recovery of an abandoned product at the endof-life stage, it is essential to develop modular product architecture by considering manufacturing and recovering processes in early product design stage. In this paper, a novel concept of a design methodology is introduced to develop eco-modular product architecture and assess the modularity of the architecture from the viewpoint of product recovery. Eco-modular product architecture contributes to enhancing product recovery processes by recycling and reusing modules without full disassembly at component or material levels. It leads to less consumption of natural resources and less landfill damage to the environment. Three sustainable modular drivers, namely, interface complexity, material similarity, and lifespan similarity, are introduced to reconstruct the modular architecture of commercial products into the eco-modular architecture. Alternatives of modular architectures are identified by Markov Cluster Algorithm based on these sustainable modular drivers and physical interconnections of the components of product architecture. To select the eco-modular architecture from these alternatives, we propose modularity assessment metrics to identify independent interactions between modules and the degrees of similarity within each module. To demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed methodology, a case study is performed with a coffee maker.
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