Additive manufacturing for the automotive industry: on the life-cycle environmental implications of material substitution and lightweighting through re-design

被引:26
|
作者
Priarone, Paolo C. C. [1 ]
Catalano, Angioletta R. R. [1 ]
Settineri, Luca [1 ]
机构
[1] Dept Management & Prod Engn DIGEP, Corso Duca Abruzzi 24, I-10129 Turin, Italy
关键词
Sustainable development; Additive manufacturing; Lifecycle assessment; Automotive sector; TOPOLOGY OPTIMIZATION; SUSTAINABILITY; DESIGN; PRINCIPLES; STRATEGIES; REDUCTION; FRAMEWORK; IMPACTS; ENERGY; PAPER;
D O I
10.1007/s40964-023-00395-x
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
The automotive sector has recently been taking measures to reduce fuel consumption and greenhouse gas emissions for the mobility of ground vehicles. Light-weighting, via material substitution, and the re-designing of components or even a combination of the two, have been identified as a crucial solution. Additive manufacturing (AM) can be used to technologically complement or even replace conventional manufacturing in several industrial fields. The enabling of complexity-for-free (re) designs is inherent in additive manufacturing. It is expected that certain benefits can be achieved from the adoption of re-design techniques, via AM, that rely on topological optimisation, e.g., a reduced use of resources in both the material production and use phases. However, the consequent higher specific energy consumption and the higher embodied impact of feedstock materials could result in unsustainable environmental costs. This paper investigates the case of the light-weighting of an automobile component to quantify the outcomes of the systematic integration of re-designing and material substitution. A bracket, originally cast in iron, has been manufactured by means of a powder bed-based AM technique in AlSi10Mg through an optimized topology. Both manufacturing routes have been evaluated through a comparative Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) within cradle-to-grave boundaries. A 69%-lightweighting has been achieved, and the carbon dioxide emissions and energy demands of both scenarios have been compared. Besides the use-phase-related savings in terms of both energy and carbon footprint due to the lightweighting, the results highlight the environmental trade-offs and prompt the consideration of such a manufacturing process as an integral part of sustainable product development.
引用
收藏
页码:1229 / 1240
页数:12
相关论文
共 10 条
  • [1] Additive manufacturing for the automotive industry: on the life-cycle environmental implications of material substitution and lightweighting through re-design
    Paolo C. Priarone
    Angioletta R. Catalano
    Luca Settineri
    Progress in Additive Manufacturing, 2023, 8 : 1229 - 1240
  • [2] The role of re-design for Additive Manufacturing on the process environmental performance
    Priarone, Paolo C.
    Ingarao, Giuseppe
    Lunetto, Vincenzo
    Di Lorenzo, Rosa
    Settineri, Luca
    25TH CIRP LIFE CYCLE ENGINEERING (LCE) CONFERENCE, 2018, 69 : 124 - 129
  • [3] A Review of Conventional versus Additive Manufacturing for Metals: Life-Cycle Environmental and Economic Analysis
    Mecheter, Asma
    Tarlochan, Faris
    Kucukvar, Murat
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 15 (16)
  • [4] Investigating Mass Reduction Capabilities of Additive Manufacturing through the Re-Design of a Space-Based Mirror
    Tuck, Rhys
    Chahid, Younes
    Lister, Greg
    Morris, Katherine
    Carruthers, James
    Beardsley, Mat
    Harris, Michael
    Matukiewicz, Michal
    Alcock, Simon
    Nistea, Ioana Theodora
    Atkins, Carolyn
    ADVANCES IN OPTICAL AND MECHANICAL TECHNOLOGIES FOR TELESCOPES AND INSTRUMENTATION VI, 2024, 13100
  • [5] Comparing environmental impacts of additive manufacturing vs traditional machining via life-cycle assessment
    Faludi, Jeremy
    Bayley, Cindy
    Bhogal, Suraj
    Iribarne, Myles
    RAPID PROTOTYPING JOURNAL, 2015, 21 (01) : 14 - 33
  • [6] Three-stage CE iterative re-design scenario for eliminating uncertainty during the product's life-cycle
    Semoushin, IV
    CONCURRENT ENGINEERING: ADVANCED DESIGN, PRODUCTION AND MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, 2003, : 79 - 86
  • [7] A CO2 EMISSIONS LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT OF ADDITIVE AND CONVENTIONAL MANUFACTURING BASED LIGHTWEIGHT DESIGN IN THE AUTOMOTIVE
    Dalpadulo, Enrico
    Pini, Fabio
    Leali, Francesco
    PROCEEDINGS OF ASME 2023 INTERNATIONAL MECHANICAL ENGINEERING CONGRESS AND EXPOSITION, IMECE2023, VOL 2, 2023,
  • [8] Conceptual design and life-cycle environmental and economic assessment of low-carbon cement manufacturing processes
    Wang, Yushu
    Yang, Minglei
    Shen, Feifei
    Zhou, Min
    Du, Wenli
    JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION, 2024, 471
  • [9] Environmental analysis of practical design options for enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) through life-cycle assessment
    Lacirignola, Martino
    Blanc, Isabelle
    RENEWABLE ENERGY, 2013, 50 : 901 - 914
  • [10] Addressing Hazardous Implications of Additive Manufacturing Complementing Life Cycle Assessment with a Framework for Evaluating Direct Human Health and Environmental Impacts
    Bours, Justin
    Adzima, Brian
    Gladwin, Susan
    Cabral, Julia
    Mau, Serena
    JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY, 2017, 21 : S25 - S36