Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
440759 Computer-Aided Design 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Primitive extraction: detect primitive which corresponds locally to the 3D mesh.•Adjacency relation determination: define the relationship between primitives.•Wire construction: based on the intersection curves between neighboring primitives.•B-Rep creation: that works even in the case of an outline on a periodic surface.

In an industrial context, most manufactured objects are designed using CAD (Computer-Aided Design) software. For visualization, data exchange or manufacturing applications, the geometric model has to be discretized into a 3D mesh composed of a finite number of vertices and edges. However, the initial model may sometimes be lost or unavailable. In other cases, the 3D discrete representation may be modified, e.g. after numerical simulation, and no longer corresponds to the initial model. A retro-engineering method is then required to reconstruct a 3D continuous representation from the discrete one.In this paper, we present an automatic and comprehensive retro-engineering process dedicated mainly to 3D meshes obtained initially by mechanical object discretization. First, several improvements in automatic detection of geometric primitives from a 3D mesh are presented. Then a new formalism is introduced to define the topology of the object and compute the intersections between primitives. The proposed method is validated on 3D industrial meshes.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design
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