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Solid modeling

Solid modeling (or solid modelling) is a consistent set of principles for mathematical and computer modeling of three-dimensional shapes (solids). Solid modeling is distinguished within the broader related areas of geometric modeling and computer graphics, such as 3D modeling, by its emphasis on physical fidelity.[1] Together, the principles of geometric and solid modeling form the foundation of 3D-computer-aided design and in general support the creation, exchange, visualization, animation, interrogation, and annotation of digital models of physical objects.

The geometry in solid modeling is fully described in 3‑D space; objects can be viewed from any angle.

Overview edit

The use of solid modeling techniques allows for the automation process of several difficult engineering calculations that are carried out as a part of the design process. Simulation, planning, and verification of processes such as machining and assembly were one of the main catalysts for the development of solid modeling. More recently, the range of supported manufacturing applications has been greatly expanded to include sheet metal manufacturing, injection molding, welding, pipe routing, etc. Beyond traditional manufacturing, solid modeling techniques serve as the foundation for rapid prototyping, digital data archival and reverse engineering by reconstructing solids from sampled points on physical objects, mechanical analysis using finite elements, motion planning and NC path verification, kinematic and dynamic analysis of mechanisms, and so on. A central problem in all these applications is the ability to effectively represent and manipulate three-dimensional geometry in a fashion that is consistent with the physical behavior of real artifacts. Solid modeling research and development has effectively addressed many of these issues, and continues to be a central focus of computer-aided engineering.

Mathematical foundations edit

The notion of solid modeling as practised today relies on the specific need for informational completeness in mechanical geometric modeling systems, in the sense that any computer model should support all geometric queries that may be asked of its corresponding physical object. The requirement implicitly recognizes the possibility of several computer representations of the same physical object as long as any two such representations are consistent. It is impossible to computationally verify informational completeness of a representation unless the notion of a physical object is defined in terms of computable mathematical properties and independent of any particular representation. Such reasoning led to the development of the modeling paradigm that has shaped the field of solid modeling as we know it today.[2]

All manufactured components have finite size and well behaved boundaries, so initially the focus was on mathematically modeling rigid parts made of homogeneous isotropic material that could be added or removed. These postulated properties can be translated into properties of regions, subsets of three-dimensional Euclidean space. The two common approaches to define "solidity" rely on point-set topology and algebraic topology respectively. Both models specify how solids can be built from simple pieces or cells.

 
Regularization of a 2D set by taking the closure of its interior

According to the continuum point-set model of solidity, all the points of any X ⊂ ℝ3 can be classified according to their neighborhoods with respect to X as interior, exterior, or boundary points. Assuming ℝ3 is endowed with the typical Euclidean metric, a neighborhood of a point pX takes the form of an open ball. For X to be considered solid, every neighborhood of any pX must be consistently three dimensional; points with lower-dimensional neighborhoods indicate a lack of solidity. Dimensional homogeneity of neighborhoods is guaranteed for the class of closed regular sets, defined as sets equal to the closure of their interior. Any X ⊂ ℝ3 can be turned into a closed regular set or "regularized" by taking the closure of its interior, and thus the modeling space of solids is mathematically defined to be the space of closed regular subsets of ℝ3 (by the Heine-Borel theorem it is implied that all solids are compact sets). In addition, solids are required to be closed under the Boolean operations of set union, intersection, and difference (to guarantee solidity after material addition and removal). Applying the standard Boolean operations to closed regular sets may not produce a closed regular set, but this problem can be solved by regularizing the result of applying the standard Boolean operations.[3] The regularized set operations are denoted ∪, ∩, and −.

The combinatorial characterization of a set X ⊂ ℝ3 as a solid involves representing X as an orientable cell complex so that the cells provide finite spatial addresses for points in an otherwise innumerable continuum.[1] The class of semi-analytic bounded subsets of Euclidean space is closed under Boolean operations (standard and regularized) and exhibits the additional property that every semi-analytic set can be stratified into a collection of disjoint cells of dimensions 0,1,2,3. A triangulation of a semi-analytic set into a collection of points, line segments, triangular faces, and tetrahedral elements is an example of a stratification that is commonly used. The combinatorial model of solidity is then summarized by saying that in addition to being semi-analytic bounded subsets, solids are three-dimensional topological polyhedra, specifically three-dimensional orientable manifolds with boundary.[4] In particular this implies the Euler characteristic of the combinatorial boundary[5] of the polyhedron is 2. The combinatorial manifold model of solidity also guarantees the boundary of a solid separates space into exactly two components as a consequence of the Jordan-Brouwer theorem, thus eliminating sets with non-manifold neighborhoods that are deemed impossible to manufacture.

The point-set and combinatorial models of solids are entirely consistent with each other, can be used interchangeably, relying on continuum or combinatorial properties as needed, and can be extended to n dimensions. The key property that facilitates this consistency is that the class of closed regular subsets of ℝn coincides precisely with homogeneously n-dimensional topological polyhedra. Therefore, every n-dimensional solid may be unambiguously represented by its boundary and the boundary has the combinatorial structure of an n−1-dimensional polyhedron having homogeneously n−1-dimensional neighborhoods.

Solid representation schemes edit

Based on assumed mathematical properties, any scheme of representing solids is a method for capturing information about the class of semi-analytic subsets of Euclidean space. This means all representations are different ways of organizing the same geometric and topological data in the form of a data structure. All representation schemes are organized in terms of a finite number of operations on a set of primitives. Therefore, the modeling space of any particular representation is finite, and any single representation scheme may not completely suffice to represent all types of solids. For example, solids defined via combinations of regularized boolean operations cannot necessarily be represented as the sweep of a primitive moving according to a space trajectory, except in very simple cases. This forces modern geometric modeling systems to maintain several representation schemes of solids and also facilitate efficient conversion between representation schemes.

Below is a list of common techniques used to create or represent solid models.[4] Modern modeling software may use a combination of these schemes to represent a solid.

Primitive instancing edit

This scheme is based on notion of families of object, each member of a family distinguishable from the other by a few parameters. Each object family is called a generic primitive, and individual objects within a family are called primitive instances. For example, a family of bolts is a generic primitive, and a single bolt specified by a particular set of parameters is a primitive instance. The distinguishing characteristic of pure parameterized instancing schemes is the lack of means for combining instances to create new structures which represent new and more complex objects. The other main drawback of this scheme is the difficulty of writing algorithms for computing properties of represented solids. A considerable amount of family-specific information must be built into the algorithms and therefore each generic primitive must be treated as a special case, allowing no uniform overall treatment.

Spatial occupancy enumeration edit

This scheme is essentially a list of spatial cells occupied by the solid. The cells, also called voxels are cubes of a fixed size and are arranged in a fixed spatial grid (other polyhedral arrangements are also possible but cubes are the simplest). Each cell may be represented by the coordinates of a single point, such as the cell's centroid. Usually a specific scanning order is imposed and the corresponding ordered set of coordinates is called a spatial array. Spatial arrays are unambiguous and unique solid representations but are too verbose for use as 'master' or definitional representations. They can, however, represent coarse approximations of parts and can be used to improve the performance of geometric algorithms, especially when used in conjunction with other representations such as constructive solid geometry.

Cell decomposition edit

This scheme follows from the combinatoric (algebraic topological) descriptions of solids detailed above. A solid can be represented by its decomposition into several cells. Spatial occupancy enumeration schemes are a particular case of cell decompositions where all the cells are cubical and lie in a regular grid. Cell decompositions provide convenient ways for computing certain topological properties of solids such as its connectedness (number of pieces) and genus (number of holes). Cell decompositions in the form of triangulations are the representations used in 3D finite elements for the numerical solution of partial differential equations. Other cell decompositions such as a Whitney regular stratification or Morse decompositions may be used for applications in robot motion planning.[6]

Surface mesh modeling edit

Similar to boundary representation, the surface of the object is represented. However, rather than complex data structures and NURBS, a simple surface mesh of vertices and edges is used. Surface meshes can be structured (as in triangular meshes in STL files or quad meshes with horizontal and vertical rings of quadrilaterals), or unstructured meshes with randomly grouped triangles and higher level polygons.

Constructive solid geometry edit

Constructive solid geometry (CSG) is a family of schemes for representing rigid solids as Boolean constructions or combinations of primitives via the regularized set operations discussed above. CSG and boundary representations are currently the most important representation schemes for solids. CSG representations take the form of ordered binary trees where non-terminal nodes represent either rigid transformations (orientation preserving isometries) or regularized set operations. Terminal nodes are primitive leaves that represent closed regular sets. The semantics of CSG representations is clear. Each subtree represents a set resulting from applying the indicated transformations/regularized set operations on the set represented by the primitive leaves of the subtree. CSG representations are particularly useful for capturing design intent in the form of features corresponding to material addition or removal (bosses, holes, pockets etc.). The attractive properties of CSG include conciseness, guaranteed validity of solids, computationally convenient Boolean algebraic properties, and natural control of a solid's shape in terms of high level parameters defining the solid's primitives and their positions and orientations. The relatively simple data structure and elegant recursive algorithms[7] have further contributed to the popularity of CSG.

Sweeping edit

The basic notion embodied in sweeping schemes is simple. A set moving through space may trace or sweep out volume (a solid) that may be represented by the moving set and its trajectory. Such a representation is important in the context of applications such as detecting the material removed from a cutter as it moves along a specified trajectory, computing dynamic interference of two solids undergoing relative motion, motion planning, and even in computer graphics applications such as tracing the motions of a brush moved on a canvas. Most commercial CAD systems provide (limited) functionality for constructing swept solids mostly in the form of a two dimensional cross section moving on a space trajectory transversal to the section. However, current research has shown several approximations of three dimensional shapes moving across one parameter, and even multi-parameter motions.

Implicit representation edit

A very general method of defining a set of points X is to specify a predicate that can be evaluated at any point in space. In other words, X is defined implicitly to consist of all the points that satisfy the condition specified by the predicate. The simplest form of a predicate is the condition on the sign of a real valued function resulting in the familiar representation of sets by equalities and inequalities. For example, if   the conditions  ,  , and   represent, respectively, a plane and two open linear halfspaces. More complex functional primitives may be defined by boolean combinations of simpler predicates. Furthermore, the theory of R-functions allow conversions of such representations into a single function inequality for any closed semi analytic set. Such a representation can be converted to a boundary representation using polygonization algorithms, for example, the marching cubes algorithm.

Parametric and feature-based modeling edit

Features are defined to be parametric shapes associated with attributes such as intrinsic geometric parameters (length, width, depth etc.), position and orientation, geometric tolerances, material properties, and references to other features.[8] Features also provide access to related production processes and resource models. Thus, features have a semantically higher level than primitive closed regular sets. Features are generally expected to form a basis for linking CAD with downstream manufacturing applications, and also for organizing databases for design data reuse. Parametric feature based modeling is frequently combined with constructive binary solid geometry (CSG) to fully describe systems of complex objects in engineering.

History of solid modelers edit

The historical development of solid modelers has to be seen in context of the whole history of CAD, the key milestones being the development of the research system BUILD followed by its commercial spin-off Romulus which went on to influence the development of Parasolid, ACIS and Solid Modeling Solutions. One of the first CAD developers in the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), ASCON began internal development of its own solid modeler in the 1990s.[9] In November 2012, the mathematical division of ASCON became a separate company, and was named C3D Labs. It was assigned the task of developing the C3D geometric modeling kernel as a standalone product – the only commercial 3D modeling kernel from Russia.[10] Other contributions came from Mäntylä, with his GWB and from the GPM project which contributed, among other things, hybrid modeling techniques at the beginning of the 1980s. This is also when the Programming Language of Solid Modeling PLaSM was conceived at the University of Rome.

Computer-aided design edit

The modeling of solids is only the minimum requirement of a CAD system's capabilities. Solid modelers have become commonplace in engineering departments in the last ten years[when?] due to faster computers and competitive software pricing. Solid modeling software creates a virtual 3D representation of components for machine design and analysis.[11] A typical graphical user interface includes programmable macros, keyboard shortcuts and dynamic model manipulation. The ability to dynamically re-orient the model, in real-time shaded 3-D, is emphasized and helps the designer maintain a mental 3-D image.

A solid part model generally consists of a group of features, added one at a time, until the model is complete. Engineering solid models are built mostly with sketcher-based features; 2-D sketches that are swept along a path to become 3-D. These may be cuts, or extrusions for example. Design work on components is usually done within the context of the whole product using assembly modeling methods. An assembly model incorporates references to individual part models that comprise the product.[12]

Another type of modeling technique is 'surfacing' (Freeform surface modeling). Here, surfaces are defined, trimmed and merged, and filled to make solid. The surfaces are usually defined with datum curves in space and a variety of complex commands. Surfacing is more difficult, but better applicable to some manufacturing techniques, like injection molding. Solid models for injection molded parts usually have both surfacing and sketcher based features.

Engineering drawings can be created semi-automatically and reference the solid models.

Parametric modeling edit

Parametric modeling uses parameters to define a model (dimensions, for example). Examples of parameters are: dimensions used to create model features, material density, formulas to describe swept features, imported data (that describe a reference surface, for example). The parameter may be modified later, and the model will update to reflect the modification. Typically, there is a relationship between parts, assemblies, and drawings. A part consists of multiple features, and an assembly consists of multiple parts. Drawings can be made from either parts or assemblies.

Example: A shaft is created by extruding a circle 100 mm. A hub is assembled to the end of the shaft. Later, the shaft is modified to be 200 mm long (click on the shaft, select the length dimension, modify to 200). When the model is updated the shaft will be 200 mm long, the hub will relocate to the end of the shaft to which it was assembled, and the engineering drawings and mass properties will reflect all changes automatically.

Related to parameters, but slightly different, are constraints. Constraints are relationships between entities that make up a particular shape. For a window, the sides might be defined as being parallel, and of the same length. Parametric modeling is obvious and intuitive. But for the first three decades of CAD this was not the case. Modification meant re-draw, or add a new cut or protrusion on top of old ones. Dimensions on engineering drawings were created, instead of shown. Parametric modeling is very powerful, but requires more skill in model creation. A complicated model for an injection molded part may have a thousand features, and modifying an early feature may cause later features to fail. Skillfully created parametric models are easier to maintain and modify. Parametric modeling also lends itself to data re-use. A whole family of capscrews can be contained in one model, for example.

Medical solid modeling edit

Modern computed axial tomography and magnetic resonance imaging scanners can be used to create solid models of internal body features called voxel-based models, with images generated using volume rendering. Optical 3D scanners can be used to create point clouds or polygon mesh models of external body features.

Uses of medical solid modeling;

  • Visualization
  • Visualization of specific body tissues (just blood vessels and tumor, for example)
  • Designing prosthetics, orthotics, and other medical and dental devices (this is sometimes called mass customization)
  • Creating polygon mesh models for rapid prototyping (to aid surgeons preparing for difficult surgeries, for example)
  • Combining polygon mesh models with CAD solid modeling (design of hip replacement parts, for example)
  • Computational analysis of complex biological processes, e.g. air flow, blood flow
  • Computational simulation of new medical devices and implants in vivo

If the use goes beyond visualization of the scan data, processes like image segmentation and image-based meshing will be necessary to generate an accurate and realistic geometrical description of the scan data.

Engineering edit

 
Mass properties window of a model in Cobalt

Because CAD programs running on computers "understand" the true geometry comprising complex shapes, many attributes of/for a 3‑D solid, such as its center of gravity, volume, and mass, can be quickly calculated. For instance, the cube with rounded edges shown at the top of this article measures 8.4 mm from flat to flat. Despite its many radii and the shallow pyramid on each of its six faces, its properties are readily calculated for the designer, as shown in the screenshot at right.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Shapiro, Vadim (2001). Solid Modeling. Elsevier. Retrieved 20 April 2010.
  2. ^ Requicha, A.A.G & Voelcker, H. (1983). "Solid Modeling: Current Status and Research Directions". IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications. IEEE Computer Graphics. 3 (7): 25–37. doi:10.1109/MCG.1983.263271. S2CID 14462567.
  3. ^ Tilove, R.B.; Requicha, A.A.G. (1980), "Closure of Boolean operations on geometric entities", Computer-Aided Design, 12 (5): 219–220, doi:10.1016/0010-4485(80)90025-1
  4. ^ a b Requicha, A.A.G. (1980). "Representations for Rigid Solids: Theory, Methods, and Systems". ACM Computing Surveys. 12 (4): 437–464. doi:10.1145/356827.356833. S2CID 207568300.
  5. ^ Hatcher, A. (2002). Algebraic Topology. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 20 April 2010.
  6. ^ Canny, John F. (1987). The Complexity of Robot Motion Planning. MIT press, ACM doctoral dissertation award. Retrieved 20 April 2010.
  7. ^ Ziegler, M. (2004). "Computable Operators on Regular Sets". Mathematical Logic Quarterly. Wiley. 50 (45): 392–404. doi:10.1002/malq.200310107. S2CID 17579181.
  8. ^ Mantyla, M., Nau, D. , and Shah, J. (1996). "Challenges in feature based manufacturing research". Communications of the ACM. 39 (2): 77–85. doi:10.1145/230798.230808. S2CID 3340804.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Yares, Evan (April 2013). . Design World. WTWH Media, LLC. 8 (4). ISSN 1941-7217. Archived from the original on 30 January 2015.
  10. ^ Golovanov, Nikolay (2014). Geometric Modeling: The mathematics of shapes. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (24 December 2014). p. Back cover. ISBN 978-1497473195.
  11. ^ LaCourse, Donald (1995). "2". Handbook of Solid Modeling. McGraw Hill. p. 2.5. ISBN 978-0-07-035788-4.
  12. ^ LaCourse, Donald (1995). "11". Handbook of Solid Modeling. McGraw Hill. p. 111.2. ISBN 978-0-07-035788-4.

External links edit

  • sgCore C++/C# library
  • The Solid Modeling Association

solid, modeling, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, experts, without, removing, technical, details, january, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, solid, modelling, consistent, princi. This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Solid modeling or solid modelling is a consistent set of principles for mathematical and computer modeling of three dimensional shapes solids Solid modeling is distinguished within the broader related areas of geometric modeling and computer graphics such as 3D modeling by its emphasis on physical fidelity 1 Together the principles of geometric and solid modeling form the foundation of 3D computer aided design and in general support the creation exchange visualization animation interrogation and annotation of digital models of physical objects The geometry in solid modeling is fully described in 3 D space objects can be viewed from any angle Contents 1 Overview 2 Mathematical foundations 3 Solid representation schemes 3 1 Primitive instancing 3 2 Spatial occupancy enumeration 3 3 Cell decomposition 3 4 Surface mesh modeling 3 5 Constructive solid geometry 3 6 Sweeping 3 7 Implicit representation 3 8 Parametric and feature based modeling 4 History of solid modelers 5 Computer aided design 5 1 Parametric modeling 5 2 Medical solid modeling 5 3 Engineering 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOverview editThe use of solid modeling techniques allows for the automation process of several difficult engineering calculations that are carried out as a part of the design process Simulation planning and verification of processes such as machining and assembly were one of the main catalysts for the development of solid modeling More recently the range of supported manufacturing applications has been greatly expanded to include sheet metal manufacturing injection molding welding pipe routing etc Beyond traditional manufacturing solid modeling techniques serve as the foundation for rapid prototyping digital data archival and reverse engineering by reconstructing solids from sampled points on physical objects mechanical analysis using finite elements motion planning and NC path verification kinematic and dynamic analysis of mechanisms and so on A central problem in all these applications is the ability to effectively represent and manipulate three dimensional geometry in a fashion that is consistent with the physical behavior of real artifacts Solid modeling research and development has effectively addressed many of these issues and continues to be a central focus of computer aided engineering Mathematical foundations editThe notion of solid modeling as practised today relies on the specific need for informational completeness in mechanical geometric modeling systems in the sense that any computer model should support all geometric queries that may be asked of its corresponding physical object The requirement implicitly recognizes the possibility of several computer representations of the same physical object as long as any two such representations are consistent It is impossible to computationally verify informational completeness of a representation unless the notion of a physical object is defined in terms of computable mathematical properties and independent of any particular representation Such reasoning led to the development of the modeling paradigm that has shaped the field of solid modeling as we know it today 2 All manufactured components have finite size and well behaved boundaries so initially the focus was on mathematically modeling rigid parts made of homogeneous isotropic material that could be added or removed These postulated properties can be translated into properties of regions subsets of three dimensional Euclidean space The two common approaches to define solidity rely on point set topology and algebraic topology respectively Both models specify how solids can be built from simple pieces or cells nbsp Regularization of a 2D set by taking the closure of its interiorAccording to the continuum point set model of solidity all the points of any X ℝ3 can be classified according to their neighborhoods with respect to X as interior exterior or boundary points Assuming ℝ3 is endowed with the typical Euclidean metric a neighborhood of a point p X takes the form of an open ball For X to be considered solid every neighborhood of any p X must be consistently three dimensional points with lower dimensional neighborhoods indicate a lack of solidity Dimensional homogeneity of neighborhoods is guaranteed for the class of closed regular sets defined as sets equal to the closure of their interior Any X ℝ3 can be turned into a closed regular set or regularized by taking the closure of its interior and thus the modeling space of solids is mathematically defined to be the space of closed regular subsets of ℝ3 by the Heine Borel theorem it is implied that all solids are compact sets In addition solids are required to be closed under the Boolean operations of set union intersection and difference to guarantee solidity after material addition and removal Applying the standard Boolean operations to closed regular sets may not produce a closed regular set but this problem can be solved by regularizing the result of applying the standard Boolean operations 3 The regularized set operations are denoted and The combinatorial characterization of a set X ℝ3 as a solid involves representing X as an orientable cell complex so that the cells provide finite spatial addresses for points in an otherwise innumerable continuum 1 The class of semi analytic bounded subsets of Euclidean space is closed under Boolean operations standard and regularized and exhibits the additional property that every semi analytic set can be stratified into a collection of disjoint cells of dimensions 0 1 2 3 A triangulation of a semi analytic set into a collection of points line segments triangular faces and tetrahedral elements is an example of a stratification that is commonly used The combinatorial model of solidity is then summarized by saying that in addition to being semi analytic bounded subsets solids are three dimensional topological polyhedra specifically three dimensional orientable manifolds with boundary 4 In particular this implies the Euler characteristic of the combinatorial boundary 5 of the polyhedron is 2 The combinatorial manifold model of solidity also guarantees the boundary of a solid separates space into exactly two components as a consequence of the Jordan Brouwer theorem thus eliminating sets with non manifold neighborhoods that are deemed impossible to manufacture The point set and combinatorial models of solids are entirely consistent with each other can be used interchangeably relying on continuum or combinatorial properties as needed and can be extended to n dimensions The key property that facilitates this consistency is that the class of closed regular subsets of ℝn coincides precisely with homogeneously n dimensional topological polyhedra Therefore every n dimensional solid may be unambiguously represented by its boundary and the boundary has the combinatorial structure of an n 1 dimensional polyhedron having homogeneously n 1 dimensional neighborhoods Solid representation schemes editBased on assumed mathematical properties any scheme of representing solids is a method for capturing information about the class of semi analytic subsets of Euclidean space This means all representations are different ways of organizing the same geometric and topological data in the form of a data structure All representation schemes are organized in terms of a finite number of operations on a set of primitives Therefore the modeling space of any particular representation is finite and any single representation scheme may not completely suffice to represent all types of solids For example solids defined via combinations of regularized boolean operations cannot necessarily be represented as the sweep of a primitive moving according to a space trajectory except in very simple cases This forces modern geometric modeling systems to maintain several representation schemes of solids and also facilitate efficient conversion between representation schemes Below is a list of common techniques used to create or represent solid models 4 Modern modeling software may use a combination of these schemes to represent a solid Primitive instancing edit This scheme is based on notion of families of object each member of a family distinguishable from the other by a few parameters Each object family is called a generic primitive and individual objects within a family are called primitive instances For example a family of bolts is a generic primitive and a single bolt specified by a particular set of parameters is a primitive instance The distinguishing characteristic of pure parameterized instancing schemes is the lack of means for combining instances to create new structures which represent new and more complex objects The other main drawback of this scheme is the difficulty of writing algorithms for computing properties of represented solids A considerable amount of family specific information must be built into the algorithms and therefore each generic primitive must be treated as a special case allowing no uniform overall treatment Spatial occupancy enumeration edit This scheme is essentially a list of spatial cells occupied by the solid The cells also called voxels are cubes of a fixed size and are arranged in a fixed spatial grid other polyhedral arrangements are also possible but cubes are the simplest Each cell may be represented by the coordinates of a single point such as the cell s centroid Usually a specific scanning order is imposed and the corresponding ordered set of coordinates is called a spatial array Spatial arrays are unambiguous and unique solid representations but are too verbose for use as master or definitional representations They can however represent coarse approximations of parts and can be used to improve the performance of geometric algorithms especially when used in conjunction with other representations such as constructive solid geometry Cell decomposition edit This scheme follows from the combinatoric algebraic topological descriptions of solids detailed above A solid can be represented by its decomposition into several cells Spatial occupancy enumeration schemes are a particular case of cell decompositions where all the cells are cubical and lie in a regular grid Cell decompositions provide convenient ways for computing certain topological properties of solids such as its connectedness number of pieces and genus number of holes Cell decompositions in the form of triangulations are the representations used in 3D finite elements for the numerical solution of partial differential equations Other cell decompositions such as a Whitney regular stratification or Morse decompositions may be used for applications in robot motion planning 6 Surface mesh modeling edit Similar to boundary representation the surface of the object is represented However rather than complex data structures and NURBS a simple surface mesh of vertices and edges is used Surface meshes can be structured as in triangular meshes in STL files or quad meshes with horizontal and vertical rings of quadrilaterals or unstructured meshes with randomly grouped triangles and higher level polygons Constructive solid geometry edit Main article Constructive Solid Geometry Constructive solid geometry CSG is a family of schemes for representing rigid solids as Boolean constructions or combinations of primitives via the regularized set operations discussed above CSG and boundary representations are currently the most important representation schemes for solids CSG representations take the form of ordered binary trees where non terminal nodes represent either rigid transformations orientation preserving isometries or regularized set operations Terminal nodes are primitive leaves that represent closed regular sets The semantics of CSG representations is clear Each subtree represents a set resulting from applying the indicated transformations regularized set operations on the set represented by the primitive leaves of the subtree CSG representations are particularly useful for capturing design intent in the form of features corresponding to material addition or removal bosses holes pockets etc The attractive properties of CSG include conciseness guaranteed validity of solids computationally convenient Boolean algebraic properties and natural control of a solid s shape in terms of high level parameters defining the solid s primitives and their positions and orientations The relatively simple data structure and elegant recursive algorithms 7 have further contributed to the popularity of CSG Sweeping edit The basic notion embodied in sweeping schemes is simple A set moving through space may trace or sweep out volume a solid that may be represented by the moving set and its trajectory Such a representation is important in the context of applications such as detecting the material removed from a cutter as it moves along a specified trajectory computing dynamic interference of two solids undergoing relative motion motion planning and even in computer graphics applications such as tracing the motions of a brush moved on a canvas Most commercial CAD systems provide limited functionality for constructing swept solids mostly in the form of a two dimensional cross section moving on a space trajectory transversal to the section However current research has shown several approximations of three dimensional shapes moving across one parameter and even multi parameter motions Implicit representation edit Main article Function representation A very general method of defining a set of points X is to specify a predicate that can be evaluated at any point in space In other words X is defined implicitly to consist of all the points that satisfy the condition specified by the predicate The simplest form of a predicate is the condition on the sign of a real valued function resulting in the familiar representation of sets by equalities and inequalities For example if f a x b y c z d displaystyle f ax by cz d nbsp the conditions f p 0 displaystyle f p 0 nbsp f p gt 0 displaystyle f p gt 0 nbsp and f p lt 0 displaystyle f p lt 0 nbsp represent respectively a plane and two open linear halfspaces More complex functional primitives may be defined by boolean combinations of simpler predicates Furthermore the theory of R functions allow conversions of such representations into a single function inequality for any closed semi analytic set Such a representation can be converted to a boundary representation using polygonization algorithms for example the marching cubes algorithm Parametric and feature based modeling edit Features are defined to be parametric shapes associated with attributes such as intrinsic geometric parameters length width depth etc position and orientation geometric tolerances material properties and references to other features 8 Features also provide access to related production processes and resource models Thus features have a semantically higher level than primitive closed regular sets Features are generally expected to form a basis for linking CAD with downstream manufacturing applications and also for organizing databases for design data reuse Parametric feature based modeling is frequently combined with constructive binary solid geometry CSG to fully describe systems of complex objects in engineering History of solid modelers editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view June 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The historical development of solid modelers has to be seen in context of the whole history of CAD the key milestones being the development of the research system BUILD followed by its commercial spin off Romulus which went on to influence the development of Parasolid ACIS and Solid Modeling Solutions One of the first CAD developers in the Commonwealth of Independent States CIS ASCON began internal development of its own solid modeler in the 1990s 9 In November 2012 the mathematical division of ASCON became a separate company and was named C3D Labs It was assigned the task of developing the C3D geometric modeling kernel as a standalone product the only commercial 3D modeling kernel from Russia 10 Other contributions came from Mantyla with his GWB and from the GPM project which contributed among other things hybrid modeling techniques at the beginning of the 1980s This is also when the Programming Language of Solid Modeling PLaSM was conceived at the University of Rome Computer aided design editMain article Computer aided design This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message The modeling of solids is only the minimum requirement of a CAD system s capabilities Solid modelers have become commonplace in engineering departments in the last ten years when due to faster computers and competitive software pricing Solid modeling software creates a virtual 3D representation of components for machine design and analysis 11 A typical graphical user interface includes programmable macros keyboard shortcuts and dynamic model manipulation The ability to dynamically re orient the model in real time shaded 3 D is emphasized and helps the designer maintain a mental 3 D image A solid part model generally consists of a group of features added one at a time until the model is complete Engineering solid models are built mostly with sketcher based features 2 D sketches that are swept along a path to become 3 D These may be cuts or extrusions for example Design work on components is usually done within the context of the whole product using assembly modeling methods An assembly model incorporates references to individual part models that comprise the product 12 Another type of modeling technique is surfacing Freeform surface modeling Here surfaces are defined trimmed and merged and filled to make solid The surfaces are usually defined with datum curves in space and a variety of complex commands Surfacing is more difficult but better applicable to some manufacturing techniques like injection molding Solid models for injection molded parts usually have both surfacing and sketcher based features Engineering drawings can be created semi automatically and reference the solid models Parametric modeling edit Parametric modeling uses parameters to define a model dimensions for example Examples of parameters are dimensions used to create model features material density formulas to describe swept features imported data that describe a reference surface for example The parameter may be modified later and the model will update to reflect the modification Typically there is a relationship between parts assemblies and drawings A part consists of multiple features and an assembly consists of multiple parts Drawings can be made from either parts or assemblies Example A shaft is created by extruding a circle 100 mm A hub is assembled to the end of the shaft Later the shaft is modified to be 200 mm long click on the shaft select the length dimension modify to 200 When the model is updated the shaft will be 200 mm long the hub will relocate to the end of the shaft to which it was assembled and the engineering drawings and mass properties will reflect all changes automatically Related to parameters but slightly different are constraints Constraints are relationships between entities that make up a particular shape For a window the sides might be defined as being parallel and of the same length Parametric modeling is obvious and intuitive But for the first three decades of CAD this was not the case Modification meant re draw or add a new cut or protrusion on top of old ones Dimensions on engineering drawings were created instead of shown Parametric modeling is very powerful but requires more skill in model creation A complicated model for an injection molded part may have a thousand features and modifying an early feature may cause later features to fail Skillfully created parametric models are easier to maintain and modify Parametric modeling also lends itself to data re use A whole family of capscrews can be contained in one model for example Medical solid modeling edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Modern computed axial tomography and magnetic resonance imaging scanners can be used to create solid models of internal body features called voxel based models with images generated using volume rendering Optical 3D scanners can be used to create point clouds or polygon mesh models of external body features Uses of medical solid modeling Visualization Visualization of specific body tissues just blood vessels and tumor for example Designing prosthetics orthotics and other medical and dental devices this is sometimes called mass customization Creating polygon mesh models for rapid prototyping to aid surgeons preparing for difficult surgeries for example Combining polygon mesh models with CAD solid modeling design of hip replacement parts for example Computational analysis of complex biological processes e g air flow blood flow Computational simulation of new medical devices and implants in vivoIf the use goes beyond visualization of the scan data processes like image segmentation and image based meshing will be necessary to generate an accurate and realistic geometrical description of the scan data Engineering edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Computer aided engineering nbsp Mass properties window of a model in CobaltBecause CAD programs running on computers understand the true geometry comprising complex shapes many attributes of for a 3 D solid such as its center of gravity volume and mass can be quickly calculated For instance the cube with rounded edges shown at the top of this article measures 8 4 mm from flat to flat Despite its many radii and the shallow pyramid on each of its six faces its properties are readily calculated for the designer as shown in the screenshot at right See also editWire frame modelling Free surface modellingComputational geometry Computer graphics Engineering drawing Euler boundary representation List of CAx companies PLaSM Programming Language of Solid Modeling Technical drawingReferences edit a b Shapiro Vadim 2001 Solid Modeling Elsevier Retrieved 20 April 2010 Requicha A A G amp Voelcker H 1983 Solid Modeling Current Status and Research Directions IEEE Computer Graphics and Applications IEEE Computer Graphics 3 7 25 37 doi 10 1109 MCG 1983 263271 S2CID 14462567 Tilove R B Requicha A A G 1980 Closure of Boolean operations on geometric entities Computer Aided Design 12 5 219 220 doi 10 1016 0010 4485 80 90025 1 a b Requicha A A G 1980 Representations for Rigid Solids Theory Methods and Systems ACM Computing Surveys 12 4 437 464 doi 10 1145 356827 356833 S2CID 207568300 Hatcher A 2002 Algebraic Topology Cambridge University Press Retrieved 20 April 2010 Canny John F 1987 The Complexity of Robot Motion Planning MIT press ACM doctoral dissertation award Retrieved 20 April 2010 Ziegler M 2004 Computable Operators on Regular Sets Mathematical Logic Quarterly Wiley 50 45 392 404 doi 10 1002 malq 200310107 S2CID 17579181 Mantyla M Nau D and Shah J 1996 Challenges in feature based manufacturing research Communications of the ACM 39 2 77 85 doi 10 1145 230798 230808 S2CID 3340804 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Yares Evan April 2013 Russian CAD Design World WTWH Media LLC 8 4 ISSN 1941 7217 Archived from the original on 30 January 2015 Golovanov Nikolay 2014 Geometric Modeling The mathematics of shapes CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 24 December 2014 p Back cover ISBN 978 1497473195 LaCourse Donald 1995 2 Handbook of Solid Modeling McGraw Hill p 2 5 ISBN 978 0 07 035788 4 LaCourse Donald 1995 11 Handbook of Solid Modeling McGraw Hill p 111 2 ISBN 978 0 07 035788 4 External links editsgCore C C library The Solid Modeling Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Solid modeling amp oldid 1182269050, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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