REPAIR SYSTEM AND METHOD OF REPAIRING A SUBSTRATE
20200307096 ยท 2020-10-01
Assignee
Inventors
- Matthew P. Simonin (Ortonville, MI, US)
- Robert N. Saje (Shelby Township, MI, US)
- Paul J. Wolcott (Macomb, MI, US)
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C2037/90
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/386
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C73/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C73/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y50/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/165
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B29C64/386
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C64/165
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B29C73/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y30/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A repair system includes a scanning system configured for determining a contour of a void surface. The repair system also includes an additive manufacturing system configured for sequentially printing a plurality of individual layers each disposed on one another adjacent the void surface according to the contour. A method of repairing a substrate having a damaged portion defining a void and having the void surface is also disclosed.
Claims
1. A repair system comprising: a substrate having a damaged portion defining a void and having a void surface; a scanning system configured for determining a contour of the void surface; a patch having the contour and including a plurality of individual layers each disposed on one another; an additive manufacturing system configured for sequentially printing the plurality of individual layers; and an attachment material disposed in contact with the patch and the substrate such that the patch fills the void.
2. The repair system of claim 1, wherein the attachment material is an adhesive.
3. The repair system of claim 1, wherein the attachment material is a filler composition configured to blend together the patch and the substrate.
4. A repair system comprising: a scanning system configured for determining a contour of a void surface; and an additive manufacturing system configured for sequentially printing a plurality of individual layers each disposed on one another adjacent the void surface according to the contour.
5. The repair system of claim 4, further including a substrate having a damaged portion defining a void and having the void surface.
6. The repair system of claim 5, wherein the additive manufacturing system is mounted to the substrate adjacent to the void.
7. The repair system of claim 5, wherein the additive manufacturing system is characterized as a standalone apparatus and is not attached to the substrate.
8. The repair system of claim 5, wherein the substrate has a depth and the void is a crack that does not extend through an entirety of the depth.
9. The repair system of claim 5, wherein the substrate has a depth and the void is a hole that extends through an entirety of the depth.
10. The repair system of claim 5, wherein the plurality of individual layers together form a patch attached to the substrate within the void.
11. The repair system of claim 10, wherein the patch is adhered to the substrate.
12. The repair system of claim 10, wherein each of the plurality of individual layers is blended with the substrate along the contour.
13. The repair system of claim 10, wherein the substrate and the patch are formed from the same material.
14. The repair system of claim 5, wherein the substrate is an exterior panel of a vehicle.
15. A method of repairing a substrate having a damaged portion defining a void and having a void surface, the method comprising: scanning the substrate with a scanning system to thereby determine a contour of the void surface; additively manufacturing a patch having the contour and including a plurality of individual layers printed individually and each disposed on one another; and attaching the patch to the substrate within the void to thereby fill the void.
16. The method of claim 15, further including, prior to scanning, mounting the scanning system to the substrate adjacent the void.
17. The method of claim 15, wherein additively manufacturing includes printing the plurality of individual layers directly into the void to thereby form the patch in situ.
18. The method of claim 15, wherein additively manufacturing includes forming the patch external to the void before attaching the patch.
19. The method of claim 15, further including, before attaching, disposing an attachment material on at least one of the patch and the substrate within the void.
20. The method of claim 15, further including producing a set of instructions readable by an additive manufacturing system configured for additively manufacturing the patch.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] Referring to the Figures, wherein like reference numerals refer to like elements, a repair system 10 and method 12 of repairing a substrate 14 having a damaged portion 114 defining a void 16 and having a void surface 214 are shown generally in
[0027] Referring again to
[0028] As shown in
[0029] As described with continued reference to
[0030] In one non-limiting example, the additive manufacturing system 26 may be characterized as a three-dimensional (3D) printing system that may include components arranged to sequentially dispose the plurality of individual layers 28 against one another to join or solidify the plurality of individual layers 28 together under computer control and create a three-dimensional patch 30 (
[0031] In one embodiment illustrated in
[0032] In another embodiment illustrated in
[0033] Therefore, referring now to
[0034] The patch 30 may be attached to the substrate 14 by one or more suitable means. For example, the patch 30 may be adhered to the substrate 14, such as in instances where the patch 30 is formed external to the void 16 and then subsequently disposed within the void 16. As such, the repair system 10 also includes an attachment material 40 disposed in contact with the patch 30 and the substrate 14 such that the patch 30 fills the void 16. For this embodiment, the attachment material 40 may be an adhesive. In addition, although not shown, the patch 30 may have a slightly smaller volume than a volume of the void 16 such that the patch 30 and the void surface 214 define a gap (not shown) therebetween when the patch 30 is inserted into the void 16. Therefore, the attachment material 40 may be inserted into the gap and may expand to fill the gap upon, for example, curing of the attachment material 40 to thereby adhere the patch 30 to the substrate 14. That is, the gap may provide a region in which the attachment material 40 may expand upon compression by the patch 30 without overflowing onto an exterior surface of the substrate 14. Alternatively or additionally, the patch 30 may be formed to include one or more localized standoffs (not shown) also configured to space the patch 30 apart from the void surface 214, define the gap, and allow for insertion of the attachment material 40 into the gap without over-compression of the attachment material 40.
[0035] Alternatively, each of the plurality of individual layers 28 may be blended with the substrate 14 along the contour 22. That is, the substrate 14 and the patch 30 may be formed from the same material and the additive manufacturing system 26 may melt or soften the substrate 14 along the contour 22 of the void surface 214 as the additive manufacturing system 26 sequentially deposits each of the plurality of individual layers 28 onto one another within the void 16. Therefore, the patch 30 may combine with the substrate 14 along the contour 22.
[0036] However, in some embodiments, the patch 30 and the substrate 14 may be formed from different materials. Therefore, in some instances, the attachment material 40 may be a filler composition configured to blend together the patch 30 and the substrate 14. Further, the patch 30 may be painted or colorized subsequent to attaching 46 (
[0037] In one embodiment, the patch 30 may be solid. That is, the plurality of individual layers 28 may stack upon one another to form a solid body, i.e., the patch 30. However, in another embodiment, the plurality of individual layers 28 may be disposed upon one another to form a hollow body, i.e., the patch 30, having a solid exterior surface that seamlessly abuts with an external surface of the substrate 14. That is, the patch 30 may be solid or hollow. In either instance, as a non-limiting example, the patch 30 may be coated with a cured film formed from a coating composition, e.g., a paint or clearcoat, such that an appearance of the patch 30 is indistinguishable from an appearance of the substrate 14. However, the patch 30 may also be additively manufactured, e.g., printed, to already match an appearance, color, and sheen of the substrate 14 and may not require a coating or cured film.
[0038] Referring again to
[0039] Further, the method 12 includes additively manufacturing 38 the patch 30 having the contour 22 and including the plurality of individual layers 28 printed individually and disposed on one another. The method 12 also includes attaching 46 the patch 30 to the substrate 14 within the void 16 to thereby fill the void 16. Attaching 46 may include adhering the patch 30 to the substrate 14 with the attachment material 40, or may include blending together the patch 30 and the substrate 14 along the contour 22.
[0040] In one embodiment, additively manufacturing 38 may include printing the plurality of individual layers 28 directly into the void 16 to thereby form the patch 30 in situ. That is, additively manufacturing 38 may include ejecting the material, such as liquid molecules or powder grains, from the print heads 34 to thereby deposit the material and form the plurality of individual layers 28 within the void 16. Alternatively, in another embodiment, additively manufacturing 38 may include forming the patch 30 external to the void 16 before attaching 46 the patch 30.
[0041] As set forth above, the method 12 may further include, before attaching 46, disposing 48 the attachment material 40 on at least one of the patch 30 and the substrate 14 within the void 16. That is, disposing 48 may include coating the void surface 214 and/or patch 30 with the attachment material 40 such that the patch 30 adheres to or blends with the substrate 14. Further, disposing 48 may include offsetting the patch 30 from the void surface 214 by one or more standoffs to define a gap between the patch 30 and the void surface 214. Disposing 48 may also include inserting the attachment material 40 into the gap to thereby allow for compression of the attachment material 40 by the patch 30 within the void 16 without overflow of the attachment material 40 onto an external surface of the substrate 14. The method 12 may also include producing 50 the set of instructions 36 readable by the additive manufacturing system 26 that is configured for additively manufacturing 38 the patch 30. That is, producing 50 may include creating data readable by a processor of the additive manufacturing system 26.
[0042] Therefore, the repair system 10 and method 12 may seamlessly repair the damaged substrate 14. That is, the patch 30 formed by the repair system 10 and method 12, whether formed in situ or external to the substrate 14, may blend seamlessly with the substrate 14 such that the patch 30 ameliorates the void 16 and damaged portion 114 and the patch 30 is not visible as a repair. Further, the repair system 10 may be portable and economical to use, and therefore may reduce repair costs and repair time for the damaged substrate 14. In addition, the repair system 10 and method 12 may provide easily reproducible patches 30 suitable for any type, size, shape or contour 22, depth 18, texture, and/or appearance of the damaged portion 114 and void surface 214. As such, the repair system 10 and method 12 may reduce or eliminate removal and/or replacement of the entire substrate 14 when the substrate 14 is damaged.
[0043] While the best modes for carrying out the disclosure have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this disclosure relates will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the disclosure within the scope of the appended claims.