To develop a simulation tool for automatic disassembly in computer aid design (CAD) environment two difficulties are found: the huge space of generated sequences and their feasibility especially in combinatory generation. This article deals with automatic sequence generation for selective disassembly of mechanical product. Starting from a CAD model a new appropriate connection tree of a target component is constructed. This tree aims at reducing space solution by eliminatory rules. The generation of sequence is based on reading of connection tree branches and eliminatory tests of feasibility. The feasibility is checked by updating the disassembly mobility of each sequence’s element. A case study is presented to prove the effectiveness of the proposed approach.
Disassembly sequencing is a concurrent research subject in design for life-cycle. Many past and recent researches are made to give practical methods for disassembly sequencing. The problem of assembly information's modeling is one of the important sub-problems of disassembly simulation. The problem includes connection determination, disassembly direction identification, and part mobility state definition. In the present paper, the authors propose a new representation model of disassembly directions, starting from geometric and assembly data of computer aid design models. This model is based on a mobility matrix definition for every part. This matrix is also called disassembly direction matrix. The model gives information about the mobility state of a part during disassembly sequencing by updating its mobility matrix. Mobility state data are used in a practical computing of disassembly sequence feasibility. In this paper, theoretical explication of this modeling is given and validated by computational results. In the validation section, the model is applied to a computer aid design mechanism using a selective disassembly.
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