Refine
Year of publication
Institute
- Fachbereich Maschinenbau und Mechatronik (279) (remove)
Language
- English (279) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (148)
- Conference Proceeding (107)
- Book (8)
- Part of a Book (8)
- Lecture (3)
- Bachelor Thesis (1)
- Contribution to a Periodical (1)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Master's Thesis (1)
- Report (1)
Keywords
- Additive manufacturing (4)
- Gamification (4)
- additive manufacturing (3)
- Actuators (2)
- Additive Manufacturing (2)
- Aktor (2)
- Aktoren (2)
- Brake set-up (2)
- Digital Twin (2)
- Freight rail (2)
- IO-Link (2)
- L-PBF (2)
- LPBF (2)
- Microfabrication (2)
- Rapid Prototyping (2)
- Rapid prototyping (2)
- SLM (2)
- Sensor (2)
- Sensoren (2)
- Sensores (2)
- factory planning (2)
- fused filament fabrication (2)
- manufacturing flexibility (2)
- rapid tooling (2)
- 10BASE-T1L (1)
- 316L (1)
- 3D nonlinear finite element model (1)
- 3D printing (1)
- 3D-printing (1)
- 802.15.4 (1)
- Adaptive Systems (1)
- Arduino (1)
- Assembly (1)
- Assessment (1)
- Asset Administration Shell (1)
- Augmented Reality (1)
- Balanced hypergraph (1)
- Binder Jetting (1)
- Bluetooth (1)
- Brake test (1)
- Braking curves (1)
- Business Simulations (1)
- Collaborative robot (1)
- Digital Twins (1)
- Digital manufacturing (1)
- Directed Energy Deposition (1)
- Distributed Control Systems, (1)
- Driver assistance system (1)
- Duality (1)
- Effective modal mass (1)
- Error Recovery (1)
- Ethernet (1)
- Eutectic Silver Copper alloy (1)
- Field device (1)
- Glass powder (1)
- Hall’s Theorem (1)
- Hand-on-training (1)
- Human factors (1)
- Human-Robot interaction (1)
- Humidity (1)
- Hypergraph (1)
- Incident analysis (1)
- Industrial Automation Technology, (1)
- Industrial Communication (1)
- Industry 4.0 (1)
- Knowledge Transfer (1)
- Koenig’s Theorem (1)
- Laser processing (1)
- Laser-Powder Bed Fusion (1)
- Level system (1)
- MEMS ; education and training foundry (1)
- MST (1)
- Matching (1)
- Melting (1)
- Mikrosystemtechnik (1)
- Multi-agent Systems (1)
- Natural frequency (1)
- PROFINET (1)
- Path planning (1)
- Porositat (1)
- Powder Material (1)
- Rapid Technologie (1)
- Rapid manufacturing (1)
- Rapid-prototyping (1)
- Response Surface Method (1)
- SOA (1)
- Safety concept (1)
- Sensors (1)
- Serious Games (1)
- Shunting (1)
- Support System (1)
- Suspension bridge (1)
- Technologietransfer (1)
- Thermal conductivity (1)
- Thin shell finite elements (1)
- Train composition (1)
- Training (1)
- User study (1)
- VM (1)
- Vertex cover (1)
- Virtual Technology Lab (1)
- Virtual reality (1)
- Virtuelle Maschine (1)
- Virtuelles Labor (1)
- Virtuelles Laboratorium (1)
- Wireless Networks (1)
- Workspace monitoring (1)
- adaptive systems (1)
- additive manufactureing (1)
- assistance system (1)
- autonomous navigation (1)
- compression behavior (1)
- crystallization (1)
- cyber-physical production systems (1)
- digital factory (1)
- event-based simulation (1)
- gamification (1)
- glass (1)
- industrial agents (1)
- infill strategy (1)
- large-scale inspection (1)
- laser based powder fusion (1)
- manufacturing (1)
- manufacturing data model (1)
- mix flexibility (1)
- mobile manipulation (1)
- multi-agent systems (1)
- polyetheretherketone (1)
- polyetheretherketone (PEEK) (1)
- production planning and control (1)
- service-oriented architectures (1)
- surface-orthogonal path planning (1)
- technology diffusion (1)
- technology planning (1)
- technology transfer (1)
- virtual clean room (1)
- volume flexibility (1)
- wind turbine production (1)
This study reviews the practice of brake tests in freight railways, which is time consuming and not suitable to detect certain failure types. Public incident reports are analysed to derive a reasonable brake test hardware and communication architecture, which aims to provide automatic brake tests at lower cost than current solutions. The proposed solutions relies exclusively on brake pipe and brake cylinder pressure sensors, a brake release position switch as well as radio communication via standard protocols. The approach is embedded in the Wagon 4.0 concept, which is a holistic approach to a smart freight wagon. The reduction of manual processes yields a strong incentive due to high savings in manual
labour and increased productivity.
Rare event simulation to optimise maintenance intervals of safety critical redundant subsystems
(2018)
Towards inclusion of the freight rail system in the industrial internet of things - Wagon 4.0
(2017)
As researchers continue to seek the expansion of the material base for additive manufacturing, there is a need to focus attention on the Ni–Cu group of alloys which conventionally has wide industrial applications. In this work, the G-NiCu30Nb casting alloy, a variant of the Monel family of alloys with Nb and high Si content is, for the first time, processed via the laser powder bed fusion process (LPBF). Being novel to the LPBF processes, optimum LPBF parameters were determined, and hardness and tensile tests were performed in as-built conditions and after heat treatment at 1000 °C. Microstructures of the as-cast and the as-built condition were compared. Highly dense samples (99.8% density) were achieved after varying hatch distance (80 µm and 140 µm) with scanning speed (550 mm/s–1500 mm/s). There was no significant difference in microhardness between varied hatch distance print sets. Microhardness of the as-built condition (247 HV0.2) exceeded the as-cast microhardness (179 HV0.2.). Tensile specimens built in vertical (V) and horizontal (H) orientations revealed degrees of anisotropy and were superior to conventionally reported figures. Post heat treatment increased ductility from 20% to 31% (V), as well as from 16% to 25% (H), while ultimate tensile strength (UTS) and yield strength (YS) were considerably reduced.
The laser beam-submerged arc hybrid welding method originates from the knowledge that, with increasing penetration depth, the laser beam process has a tendency to pore formation in the lower weld regions. The coupling with the energy-efficient submerged-arc process improves degassing and reduces the tendency to pore formation. The high deposition rate of the SA process in combination with the laser beam process offers, providing the appropriate choice of weld preparation, the possibility of welding plates with a thickness larger than 20° mm in a single pass, and also of welding thicker plates with the double-sided single pass technique.
Electron beam plasma measurement was realised by means of DIABEAM system invented by ISF RWTH Aachen. The Langmuir probe method is used for measurement. The relative simplicity of the method and the possibility of dispersion of high power on the probe allow its application for the investigation of high-power electron beams. The key element of the method is a rotating thin tungsten wire, which intersects the beam transversely on its axis and collects part of the current by itself. The signals, which are registered in the DIABEAM as a voltage, were taken in the form of amplitude. The conversion of the probe current into the distribution along the beam radius was realised using the Abel’s method. A voltage-current characteristic was built for the beam current. The local electron density as well as the electron temperature, the floating potential and the plasma potential were measured and calculated by means of this characteristic.
Bead-on-plate butt joints of 2.5 mm hot rolled DP600/DP600 and 1.2 mm cold rolled TRIP700/TRIP700 steel sheets were performed using 6 kW CO2 laser beam welding. The welding speed ranged from 1.5 to 3.0 and from 2.1 to 3.9 m/min in DP/DP and TRIP/TRIP steel weldments respectively. A top surface helium gas was used as a shielding gas at a flow rate of 20 l/min. Metallographic examinations and transverse tensile testing (DIN EN 895: 1995) were carried out to characterize the weldments. The formability of base metals and weldments were investigated by standard Erichsen test (DIN EN ISO 20482). It was found that the uniaxial plastic behavior of both DP600 and TRIP700 base metals was in agreement with Swift and modified Mecking–Kocks models respectively. In a perpendicular tensile test to the weld line, all specimens were fractured at the base metal however the strengths were somewhat higher than those of base metal. There was a significant reduction in formability caused by welding of both DP/DP and TRIP/TRIP steel weldments and the formability has been improved with the increase of the welding speed.