2017
DOI: 10.1111/jiec.12629
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Environmental Dimensions of Additive Manufacturing: Mapping Application Domains and Their Environmental Implications

Abstract: SummaryAdditive manufacturing (AM) proposes a novel paradigm for engineering design and manufacturing, which has profound economic, environmental, and security implications. The design freedom offered by this category of manufacturing processes and its ability to locally print almost each designable object will have important repercussions across society. While AM applications are progressing from rapid prototyping to the production of end-use products, the environmental dimensions and related impacts of these… Show more

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Cited by 205 publications
(122 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
(124 reference statements)
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“…This paper builds upon the work of others who have carefully measured, analyzed, and documented the energy use and time requirements for a variety of AM technologies. These include, in particular, Baumers and colleagues (, , , , ), Faludi and colleagues (), Kellens and colleagues (, , ), Kruth and colleagues (, ), Schleifenbaum and colleagues (), and Buchbinder and colleagues (), and their co‐workers, as well as many others listed in our references.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 90%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This paper builds upon the work of others who have carefully measured, analyzed, and documented the energy use and time requirements for a variety of AM technologies. These include, in particular, Baumers and colleagues (, , , , ), Faludi and colleagues (), Kellens and colleagues (, , ), Kruth and colleagues (, ), Schleifenbaum and colleagues (), and Buchbinder and colleagues (), and their co‐workers, as well as many others listed in our references.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Kellens and colleagues () report a range of measured electrical energy values for various commercial additive technologies ranging from 51 to 1,247 MJ/kg with many of the same references that we use here.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Digital fabrication technologies such as additive manufacturing (AM), more commonly referred to as "3D Printing", can enable reductions in resource consumption by the consolidation of parts and materials ( [13] p. 101); lower transport emissions by the localisation of factories [14]; reduce material and part waste by 'make-on-demand' production models [15]; extend product lifetimes by the creation of bespoke or personalised products that more closely meet an individual user's needs [16]; and extend product lifetimes through repairs enabled by keeping 'digital stock' catalogues of replacement parts [17]. At the same time, concerns have been expressed regarding the reusability of personalised products [18]; quality control across multiple, distributed factories (and the potential for increased failure rates) [19]; and energy requirements in the production and post-processing of individual parts [20]. However, while much work is ongoing to both understand the sustainability implications of RdM and to optimize digital manufacturing processes to limit their environmental impact, little work has been done to conceptualise future scenarios of RdM, particularly in relation to stakeholders who (in a mass manufacturing paradigm), have little input but are nonetheless affected by the externalities of NPD.…”
Section: Background Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Providing context for this Special Issue, Kellens and colleagues () review available research on the environmental dimensions and related impacts of AM, reporting that only part of the overall process taxonomy is yet documented in terms of its environmental performance and life cycle inventory (LCI) efforts. The authors identify pertinent questions relating to the LCI of AM feedstock production, supply‐chain consequences, and health and safety issues relating to AM, all of which are dealt with in the work contained in this Special Issue.…”
Section: The Special Issue: Charting Impacts Across the Product Life mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As summarized in this Special Issue (Kellens et al. ), the degree of variety in, sometimes competing, operating principles in AM creates a large field for investigation of environmental performance, only part of which has been explored with reliable quantitative data being available for an even smaller subset, focusing mainly on the energy consumption of core AM processes (Huang et al. ).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%