Cost- and energy-efficient manufacture of gears by laser beam melting
Autor: | Gunther Reinhart, Timothy G. Gutowski, Christian Seidel, Max Lutter-Guenther, Tobias Kamps |
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Rok vydání: | 2018 |
Předmět: |
Hobbing
0209 industrial biotechnology Computer science Process (engineering) Scale (chemistry) 02 engineering and technology Energy consumption 010501 environmental sciences 01 natural sciences Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Manufacturing engineering Product (business) 020901 industrial engineering & automation Production (economics) Life-cycle assessment 0105 earth and related environmental sciences Efficient energy use |
Zdroj: | CIRP Journal of Manufacturing Science and Technology. 21:47-60 |
ISSN: | 1755-5817 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cirpj.2018.01.002 |
Popis: | The decision for choosing a manufacturing technology for a specific product is primarily based on cost in industrial practise. Current government regulations together with international projects like the Convention on Climate Change introduce further factors targeting a sustainably choice of manufacturing sequences. A typical measure is total energy embedded in a product based on the employed manufacturing route. Hence, industrial decision makers may have to assess both a cost- and energy-efficient production sequence. This results in the main challenge of an early estimation of manufacturing costs and energy consumption for choosing the most suitable production scenario. This is a crucial point to an industrial implementation of additive manufacturing (AM) and specifically for expensive and energy-intensive technologies for industrial metal processing like laser beam melting (LBM). This includes a consideration of both the entire process sequence embedded in a suitable production scenario and potential for product redesign derived from the use of LBM. This paper suggests two integrated models for cost and life cycle assessment in a cradle-to-gate framework focussing an industrial process sequence. Gear wheel manufacturing in a low volume or high variant production scale is chosen as a production scenario. Three industrial process sequences for gear production based on machining, hobbing, and LBM are investigated. Special focus is set to the impact of lightweight design on energy- and cost-efficiency of the manufacturing sequence. The key factors influencing cost- and energy-intensity are identified recommending a production scenario that is worthwhile for LBM for the small scale production of gears. It is concluded that both cost- and energy-efficiency have to be assessed with different process alternatives in order to identify a worthwhile scenario for LBM based on cost and life cycle assessment models. Lightweight design is identified as the most significant factor for reducing costs and energy-consumption that suggests employing lightweight design for cost- and energy-efficiency. The intended audience of this contribution are scientists, industrial applicants of LBM and conventional gear manufacturers. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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