Additive Manufacturing A Framework For Implementation
Additive Manufacturing A Framework For Implementation
art ic l e i nf o
a b s t r a c t
Article history:
Received 15 April 2012
Accepted 9 July 2013
Available online 23 July 2013
As mass production has migrated to developing countries, European and US companies are forced to rapidly
switch towards low volume production of more innovative, customised and sustainable products with high
added value. To compete in this turbulent environment, manufacturers have sought new fabrication
techniques to provide the necessary tools to support the need for increased exibility and enable economic
low volume production. One such emerging technique is Additive Manufacturing (AM). AM is a method of
manufacture which involves the joining of materials, usually layer-upon-layer, to create objects from 3D
model data. The benets of this methodology include new design freedom, removal of tooling requirements,
and economic low volumes. AM consists of various technologies to process versatile materials, and for many
years its dominant application has been the manufacture of prototypes, or Rapid Prototyping. However, the
recent growth in applications for direct part manufacture, or Rapid Manufacturing, has resulted in much
research effort focusing on development of new processes and materials. This study focuses on the
implementation process of AM and is motivated by the lack of socio-technical studies in this area.
It addresses the need for existing and potential future AM project managers to have an implementation
framework to guide their efforts in adopting this new and potentially disruptive technology class to produce
high value products and generate new business opportunities. Based on a review of prior works and through
qualitative case study analysis, we construct and test a normative structural model of implementation factors
related to AM technology, supply chain, organisation, operations and strategy.
& 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:
Additive manufacturing
Rapid manufacturing
Technology implementation
Case study
1. Introduction
Additive Manufacturing (AM) is dened as the process of
joining materials to make objects from 3D model data, usually
layer upon layer, as opposed to subtractive manufacturing methodologies, such as traditional machining (ASTM Standard). Synonyms found in the literature include additive processes, additive
techniques, additive layer manufacturing, layered manufacturing,
and freeform fabrication. There is now a large number of technologies which employ this method of manufacture, some of the
more widely used include stereolithography (SL), fused deposition
modelling (FDM), selective laser sintering (SLS) and 3D printing
(3DP). Since the development of many of these technologies has
occurred simultaneously, there are various similarities as well as
distinct differences between each one (Kulkarni et al., 2000).
Reviews of the numerous AM technologies have been performed
in previous works (Gibson et al., 2010; Groover, 2007; Hopkinson
et al., 2006).
With over 20 years of history, in its early years AM was mostly
applied for the fabrication of conceptual and functional prototypes,
also known as Rapid Prototyping (RP). These prototypes were most
commonly used as communication and inspection tools, producing
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2. Background
Fig. 1. Breakeven analysis performed by Atzeni and Salmi (2012) comparing HPDC
and SLS processes.
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4. Research methodology
Due to the exploratory nature of this research area, case studies
are used to investigate the AM implementation process and test
the research framework. Implementation research provides guidance to identify the most suitable interviewee for this research
area, indentifying the four most critical constituencies as technology vendors, upper management, project engineers and plant
operating and maintenance personnel (Zmud, 1984; Cooper and
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production work are radically lower than they are for prototypingso then you have the problem, you don't want to do
prototyping, but that's the only business around, you want to do
production, but to do production and be good at it you've got to
show you're good at doing production. So you've got a real
dichotomy there.
The strategy at Company A is therefore signicantly inuenced
by its organisational antecedents, coming from a RP background
rather than a production background. The informant suggests that
it would have been better to be a machining company that adds it
in rather than a rapid prototyping company that is trying to
become a serious aerospace or whatever supplier
There are a number of explanations for this reasoning which
inuence the approach to AM implementation at Company A,
including, the culture within RP (discussed in Section 5.3), the
company not having an established customer base (as discussed in
Section 5.5) and lacking production capability (particularly regarding the post-processing requirements in DMLS, discussed in
Section 5.4). Their response to this apparent inefciency has been
to become experts in design and application development in a
particular way. Though the company has built up a workshop
facility to support the DMLS system, through deliberately nding
and designing parts to suit the process they have been able to get
round this inadequacy and as the informant suggests:
it is much more protable to design the part where you don't do
anything to the part after you have nished, so you design it so
that it doesn't need anything doing to it and if you can do that
then its far more protable.and far quicker.
Therefore, this represents the company's main in-house capability. However, an important implication of this is that this does
require a lot of design thought, therefore regarding productivity,
downstream process may be reduced, but upstream process is
increased. Regarding the current market for DMLS products, the
informant suggests that it is difcult to know where the next job
will come from and how the market for DMLS products will
change over time. Therefore it remains a particularly turbulent
environment, where both the technologies and the markets
are relatively new. The informant also states that with a few
exceptions, industry knowledge of the process has signicantly
lagged behind that of the users. Among these exceptions is the
aerospace industry, with requirements for lighter aircraft and
more efcient processes often inuenced by environmental legislation. Company A is targeting these manufacturers as they require
less education on process benets and the components are more
suited to AM production.
5.2. AM technology
The CEOs perception of AM benet is that they must be
considered over the life cycle of the product, which itself presents
a challenge when attempting to educate customers on these
potential opportunities. This is reected in the company's focus
on Aerospace applications. In aircraft component manufacturer,
the potential to reduce part weight through the design freedom
unlocked when using AM processes can create mass savings over
the product life cycle. This is also reected in the company main
in-house capability, design and application development for AM
process. The CEO suggests:
.in terms of material usage.particularly with the metals it's
very good but you have to go through a high energy process of
turning it into powder in the rst place, do you really gain a
benet there? It's marginal to be fair. The actual machines are they
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