http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
Christian N. Svinth,Scott Wallace,Daniel B. Stephenson,Dave Kim,Kangwoo Shin,Hyo-Young Kim,Seok-Woo Lee,Tae-Gon Kim 한국정밀공학회 2022 International Journal of Precision Engineering and Vol.23 No.6
This study aims to conduct abnormality detection by applying machine learning algorithms when drilling a carbon fiber reinforced plastic laminate. In-process signals including current, thrust force, and vibration were captured during the dry drilling experiments using a 6 mm physical vapor deposit diamond-coated drill at the consistent spindle speed of 6500 RPM and 0.05 mm/rev. Across measurements from out-of-process variables, including hole diameter, roundness, surface roughness, entry/exit delamination, and entry/exit uncut fiber area, in-process measurements were most able to find outliers with respect to diameter. Both Principal Component Analysis, an unsupervised dimensionality reduction technique, and Linear Discriminant Analysis, a supervised dimensionality reduction technique, could separate oversize or undersize holes from average-sized holes when using fast Fourier transformation data of in-process vibration. Predictive performance with k-Nearest Neighbors shows that our machine learning pipeline can predict oversized vs. non-oversized holes with over 85% accuracy in this dataset. Peak prediction performance is obtained when in-process measurement data is viewed from the frequency domain, and predictions are weighted based on the relative distances of the nearest neighbors.