3D printing dimensional calibration shape: Clebsch Cubic
Andre F. van der Merwe, Janko Boehm, Magdaleen S. Marais

TL;DR
This paper introduces algebraic geometry-based shapes, specifically Clebsch Cubic surfaces, as calibration objects for 3D printing accuracy, enabling precise, analytically measurable features to improve validation processes.
Contribution
It proposes using algebraic surfaces like the Clebsch Cubic for calibration, providing a novel, analytically defined shape that simplifies measurement and validation in 3D printing.
Findings
Provides a library for constructing cubic surfaces with known features
Enables analytical measurement of intersection points and lines
Reduces material use due to minimal shape geometry
Abstract
3D printing and other layer manufacturing processes are challenged by dimensional accuracy. Several techniques are used to validate and calibrate dimensional accuracy through the complete building envelope. The validation process involves the growing and measuring of a shape with known parameters. The measured result is compared with the intended digital model. Processes with the risk of deformation after time or post processing may find this technique beneficial. We propose to use objects from algebraic geometry as test shapes. A cubic surface is given as the zero set of a 3rd degree polynomial with 3 variables. A class of cubics in real 3D space contains exactly 27 real lines. We provide a library for the computer algebra system Singular which, from 6 given points in the plane, constructs a cubic and the lines on it. A surface shape derived from a cubic offers simplicity to the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
