Search results for "Environmental impact comparison"
showing 3 items of 3 documents
Subtractive versus mass conserving metal shaping technologies: an environmental impact comparison
2015
The scientific studies in the domain of environmental sustainability of metal processing technologies predominantly focus on conventional material removal processes, as milling and turning. Despite some exceptions, many other non-machining technologies, such as metal forming processes, are still not well documented in terms of their energy and resource efficiency. Moreover, to properly evaluate the environmental impact of a given process, a standing-alone approach is no longer sufficient. In order to offer a valuable contribution in the domain of metal shaping sustainability, the present paper proposes a thorough methodology entailing to compare, from the environmental point of view, two tr…
Environmental modelling of aluminium based components manufacturing routes: Additive manufacturing versus machining versus forming
2018
Abstract Additive Manufacturing represents, by now, a viable alternative for metal-based components production. Therefore the designer, often, has to select among three options at process design stage: subtractive, mass conserving, and additive approaches. The selection of a given process, besides affecting the manufacturing step impact, influences significantly the impact related to the material production step. If the process enables a part weight reduction (as the Additive Manufacturing approaches do) even the use phase is affected by the manufacturing approach selection. The present research provides a comprehensive environmental manufacturing approaches comparison for components made o…
A methodology for the environmental comparison of metal shaping technologies: an in-depth analysis on recycling related issues
2015
The reduction of CO2 emissions is an urgent objective to pursue. The scientific and the industrial world have gathered such challenge, starting to find out energy- and resource-efficient manufacturing strategies. From the literature review, in the domain of environmental impact analysis of manufacturing processes, two relevant knowledge gaps can be spotted: (1) the metal forming processes (and, in particular, the bulk forming processes) are still not well documented, and (2) there is a lack of systematic and comparative studies on energy and material flows enabling the identification of environmentally-friendly manufacturing design strategies. This research offers a contribution to a better…