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Operators in CAD Systems

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Presentation on theme: "Operators in CAD Systems"— Presentation transcript:

1 Operators in CAD Systems
Motivation: (a) Which operators are available helps us to plan how to complete the design of a part. (b) Understand the mathematical basis, to help us to decide when to use it when not to use it, understand, if it fails, why decide how to avoid failures.

2 1. Transformations Use: (a) Building any 3D model (b) Viewing any 3D model Types of affine transformations of interest object transformations coordinate transformations

3 Mathematical Tool: matrices
Affine transformations translations rotations Shape/size of an entities is invariant with respect to translation and rotation => We need only study translation, rotation of a point (vertex) x y z Vertex = Point, column vector: [ x, y, z]T =

4 Translation Object transformation Coordinate transformation
Move r = [x, y, z]T by t = [tx, ty, tz]T : r’ = r + t, x = P in fixed frame oxyz x’ = P in frame o’x’y’z’ (translated w.r.t oxyz by –t): r’ = x’

5 Rotation Rotations in the XY plane
Rotation of P by angle q about the oz : matrix A: Rot(z,q) Object transformation Rot(z, q) == Coordinate transformation by Rot( z, - q )

6 Matrix formulas

7 2.1. Scaling Use: to shrink / expand size of a part Uniform scaling:
Multiply each coordinate in BREP by the scaling factor Operation: Map vertex, v( x, y, z) -> v’( sx, sy, sz) Property: Uniform scaling does not change the topology of the part

8 2.2. Non-uniform scaling Non-Uniform scaling
scaling each coordinate, v( x, y, z) by different scaling factors, (sx, sy, sz) Transformed coordinates: v’(sxs, syy, szz). Question: Does the topology of the part change ? Applications of Non-uniform scaling: (a) Mold design from part (b) Clothing and Footwear design, …

9 Composition of Transformations
Point in E3 as [x y z 1]T 4x4 matrices for transformations Translation Rot( X, q) Scaling

10 Rotation about an arbitrary axis
u =[u1 u2 u3] = unit vector along given axis Rotation by angle q about u q r r’ u O [x y z]T [x’ y’ z’]T

11 Arbitrary rotation of Coordinate frame
r = [x y z 1]T a point in OXYZ Oxyz = A new coordinate frame What are the coordinates of the point in Oxyz? (u1, u2, u3), (v1, v2, v3), (w1, w2, w3): DCs of u, v, w in OXYZ

12 Concatenation of Transformations
Successive transformations: (i) Translate [-5 0 –5] (ii) Rotate(Y, 45) (iii) Translate [5√2 0 15]

13 Summary 1. affine transformations: preserve collinearity
2. Affine transformations useful in CAD 3. Matrices are useful to compute transformations 4. Translations, Rotations, Scaling 5. 4x4 matrices can represent all three of these 6. A series of transformation  resultant transformation  multiply corresponding matrix in reverse order

14 Operators in CAD: Boolean operators
Boolean operations: U*, ∩*, -* inputs: regular 2-manifold solid(s) outputs: regular 2-manifold solid(s) Problem:

15 Operators in CAD: Sweeping
linear and non-linear sweep Use: solid shapes from 2D sketches INPUTS: Profile (2D sketch, one or more loops) Sweep path (continuous, bounded curve) OUTPUT: regular 2-manifold solid

16 Operators in CAD: Sweeping..
Geometric Problem: all vertices, edges, faces of output easy to generate (i) fix sketch in frame OXYZ (ii) move OXYZ along sweep-path rotation determined by tangency, torsion A:= sweep outer loop B:= sweep inner loop(s) Out := A -* B

17 Operators in CAD: Sweeping...
Other names: Extrude, Extrude-cut

18 Operators in CAD: Topological problems in Sweeping
(i) sweep path not smooth (C0, C1) (ii) self-intersection of the swept shape Example 1. How to generate shape? OR

19 Operators in CAD: Topological problems in Sweeping..
Example 2. How to generate shape? Profile maintains orientation w.r.t. global frame Profile maintains orientation w.r.t. path FAILS!

20 Operators in CAD: Chamfer, Fillet
Special cases of Blending INPUTS: Surfaces S1 and S2 that share an edge, E OUTPUT: Blending surface, B, between S1 and S2; E will vanish Interfaces between (B, S1), an (B, S2) are continuous chamfer: C0 fillet, round: C1

21 Operators in CAD: Chamfer
Typical Uses: angled recess at the end of a hole angled edge to of shaft for ease of assembly

22 Operators in CAD: Chamfer computations
(a) For each edge, create chamfer cross-section: a ‘triangle’ (b) sweep the section of each edge along the corresponding edge (c) fill ‘gaps’ at vertices (filler shapes) (d) Boolean (Part -* solid shape) for each solid shape and filler shape PROBLEM: what if neighboring faces are curved?

23 Operators in CAD: Chamfer…
Geometry, Topological Problems step (a): cross-section step (c): filling “gaps” step (d) poor/changed topology

24 Operators in CAD: Fillet, Round
Same as Chamfer, except: Geometric section used in Circular arc

25 Operators in CAD: Blending
General case of Chamfers, Fillets and Rounds USES: Smooth the edge shared between two (spline) surfaces Merge two surfaces that are close, but not touching INPUTS: Two surfaces, and shared/blending edges Blend radius

26 Operators in CAD: Blending..

27 Operators in CAD: Blending...
Problems: 1. If edge is not C1, then sweep of blend arc is not C0 2. How to store the surface equation ? Blend computation: Rolling Ball Method

28 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
Main Use: manufacturing related features: casting or molding INPUTS: (a) face / faces to be drafted (b) a neutral plane, that intersects the faces being drafted cross-section of the drafting faces on the neutral face unchanged (c) the draft angle OUTPUT: (a) Modified part geometry

29 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
Examples

30 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
Examples (4th example is special!)

31 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
Example 4: INPUTS: (a) Face(s) to be drafted (b) Draft line (c) Draft angle (d) Neutral plane

32 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
Draft method: (i) Intersect the neutral plane with the draft faces, to get a series of edges (or a loop) that must stay fixed; (ii) Each point, p on the fixed loop belongs to a Draft face, F. (iii) For each point p, form the drafted edge: (a) P = plane through p, with normal = NF X NN (b) Intersect P with F to get drafting edge, ep. (c) Rotate ep by the drafting angle in plane P, to get the drafted edge

33 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
This Draft method works for (some) non-planar draft-lines

34 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
Draft failures (a) draft feature results in non-manifold geometry draft angle: 44 10 20 draft angle: 45 X X

35 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
Draft failures (b) draft face intersection with neighboring face ill-defined Requires intersection after draft generation

36 Operators in CAD: Tapers and drafts...
Draft failures (c) draft face intersection with neighboring face ill-defined NON-PLANAR ill-defined geometry

37 Operators in CAD: Surface operations: Offsets
Inputs: Surface S, offset distance, r, offset direction Computation: for each point p on the base surface Normal = Np Offset point of p := p + r Np Planar surface: offset surface offset

38 Operators in CAD: Surface offsets, cylindrical surface
Û x y z a p q q = a + xÛ (q - p).Û = 0 (a +xÛ – p).Û = 0 x = (p – a).Û Offset point: po = p + r (p - q)/|(p – q)|

39 Operators in CAD: Surface operations
Surface offsets: BSpline surface Bspline Surface equation: p = p(u, v) pu pv Tangent vectors: Normal vector: For each point, p offset point po = p + rN NOT Bspline Offset surface equation: p(u, v) + r N(u, v)

40 Operators in CAD: Surface operations
Find a grid of points on the surface, For each point of grid, offset point po = p + rN Fit a new BSpline surface through grid po BSpline offset is UNSTABLE ! poor geometry

41 Operators in CAD: Surface operations
Surface offsets: Inputs: Surface S, offset distance, r, offset direction Computation: for each point p on the base surface Normal = Np Offset point of p := p + r Np Planar surface: offset surface offset

42 Operators in CAD: Offset -- interpretations
non-intersecting faces extended intersecting faces trimmed non-intersecting faces extended

43 Operators in CAD: Trimming
Trimming operation is based on intersection Trim R by B B R Trim B by R R must be EXTENDED

44 Operators in CAD: Trimming
BSpline surface trimming Curve extension Intersection curve

45 Operators in CAD: Shelling
Convert a solid to a “shell” Examples don’t shell left, front faces shell all don’t shell top, left faces don’t shell top face

46 Operators in CAD: Shelling
Shell computation: For each face f, compute offset face, fo Intersect each pair of offset faces Re-compute BREP of solid [topologically difficult]

47 Operators in CAD: Lofting/ Skinning
Use a series of (2D) “guide” profiles Put a “skin”: surface that interpolates each guide profile Example

48 Operators in CAD: Lofting/ Skinning
Lofting computation: Complex, involving BSpline surfaces self intersection: fails possible improvement Guide curves: Instability: skinned surface not smooth


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