Abstract Inkjet printing (IJP) is one of the promising additive manufacturing techniques that yield many innovations in electronic and biomedical products. In IJP, the products are fabricated by depositing droplets on substrates, and the quality of the products is highly affected by the droplet pinch-off behaviors. Therefore, identifying pinch-off behaviors of droplets is critical. However, annotating the pinch-off behaviors is burdensome since a large amount of images of pinch-off behaviors can be collected. Active learning (AL) is a machine learning technique which extracts human knowledge by iteratively acquiring human annotation and updating the classification model for the pinch-off behaviors identification. Consequently, a good classification performance can be achieved with limited labels. However, during the query process, the most informative instances (i.e., images) are varying and most query strategies in AL cannot handle these dynamics since they are handcrafted. Thus, this paper proposes a multiclass reinforced active learning (MCRAL) framework in which a query strategy is trained by reinforcement learning (RL). We designed a unique intrinsic reward signal to improve the classification model performance. Moreover, how to extract the features from images for pinch-off behavior identification is not trivial. Thus, we used a graph convolutional network for droplet image feature extraction. The results show that MCRAL excels AL and can reduce human efforts in pinch-off behavior identification. We further demonstrated that, by linking the process parameters to the predicted droplet pinch-off behaviors, the droplet pinch-off behavior can be adjusted based on MCRAL.
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Model Calibration in Inkjet Printing Process
Abstract Inkjet printing (IJP) is an additive manufacturing process capable to produce intricate functional structures. The IJP process performance and the quality of the printed parts are considerably affected by the deposited droplets’ volume. Obtaining consistent droplets volume during the process is difficult to achieve because the droplets are prone to variations due to various material properties, process parameters, and environmental conditions. Experimental (i.e., IJP setup observations) and computational (i.e., computational fluid dynamics (CFD)) analysis are used to study the droplets variability; however, they are expensive and computationally inefficient, respectively. The objective of this paper is to propose a framework that can perform fast and accurate droplet volume predictions for unseen IJP driving voltage regimes. A two-step approach is adopted: (1) an emulator is constructed from the physics-based droplet volume simulations to overcome the computational complexity and (2) the emulator is calibrated by incorporating the experimental IJP observations. In particular, a scaled Gaussian stochastic process (s-GaSP) is deployed for the emulation and calibration. The resulting surrogate model is able to rapidly and accurately predict the IJP droplets volume. The proposed methodology is demonstrated by calibrating the simulated data (i.e., CFD droplet simulations) emulator with experimental data from two distinct materials, namely glycerol and isopropyl alcohol.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2134409
- PAR ID:
- 10471396
- Publisher / Repository:
- American Society of Mechanical Engineers
- Date Published:
- ISBN:
- 978-0-7918-8723-3
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Location:
- New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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