Authors
Karel Kellens, Martin Baumers, Timothy G Gutowski, William Flanagan, Reid Lifset, Joost R Duflou
Publication date
2017/11
Journal
Journal of Industrial Ecology
Volume
21
Issue
S1
Pages
S49-S68
Description
Additive 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 evolving manufacturing processes have yet to be extensively examined. Only limited quantitative data are available on how AM manufactured products compare to conventionally manufactured ones in terms of energy and material consumption, transportation costs, pollution and waste, health and safety issues, as well as other environmental impacts over their full lifetime. Reported research indicates that …
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