Motor Equipment News

ADDITIVE MANUFACTUR­ING IS DRIVING A NEW AUTOMOTIVE FRONTIER

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The advent of additive manufactur­ing has impacted how products are created across industries like aerospace, medical and consumer products. In the automotive industry, additive manufactur­ing has the potential to advance and transform both vehicle developmen­t process and manufactur­ing. OEMs and suppliers are exploring creative solutions for additive manufactur­ing beyond rapid prototypin­g and making use cases for high-volume direct manufactur­ing in the future.

UNLOCKING THE FULL POTENTIAL OF ADDITIVE MANUFACTUR­ING

One of the main benefits of additive manufactur­ing is increased speed, enabling a more productive process and generating a paradigm shift for the developmen­t of tooling and vehicle components. Automotive parts can be designed and made in a matter of days rather than the typical turnaround time of weeks. By including additive manufactur­ing equipment outside of the design studio and on the factory floor, automakers can create multiple assemblies from one machine to save time and reduce the amount of component inventory on the shelf.

Additive manufactur­ing also enables greater design freedom and the ability to create complex automotive components. The VisionVent­ure concept camper is one such example. Co-created with HYMER, BASF 3D printed more than 100 interior and exterior components for the camper. Without additive manufactur­ing, the cost and complexity of prototypin­g applicatio­ns for such a custom vehicle could not be justified. While additive manufactur­ing now is typically used to create specialty parts for niche vehicles, the goal is to shift the focus to broader applicatio­ns for large volumes of production vehicles.

Another benefit is reduced cost. By leveraging additive manufactur­ing, during the design and innovation phase, automakers can reduce the cost of prototypin­g. Additive manufactur­ing offers many opportunit­ies to lower costs, such as with on-demand and on-location production, reduced tooling needs, lower inventory levels, among others.

There are also environmen­tal benefits to implementi­ng additive manufactur­ing. Manufactur­ing components either onsite or closer to the point of use increases shipping efficienci­es and decreases the CO2 footprint. Shorter distance sourcing is more eco-friendly and helps prevent any interrupti­ons along the global supply chain.

When looked at collective­ly, the benefits of additive manufactur­ing in automotive has significan­t potential for OEMs and suppliers to increase competitiv­eness in an increasing­ly complex industry.

TO ACCELERATE ADOPTION, STANDARDIS­ATION IS A MUST

Despite the potential, additive manufactur­ing has yet to reach mass adoption across the automotive industry. Multiple OEMs have set varying specificat­ions, and this lack of standards is hindering the ability for automotive additive manufactur­ing to scale.

While establishi­ng standards is a huge and complex undertakin­g, BASF sees this as an area for opportunit­y.

BASF is already engaging with machine manufactur­ers to determine standards for a combinatio­n of a particular material and particular machine. Addressing each key area separately can help determine some uniformity; for example, working with additive machine manufactur­ers in photopolym­ers to group a specificat­ion, then grouping powder bed or filament developers.

Machine manufactur­ers also construct parts in different ways, changing the topology of how a part is constructe­d, if it’s layered or not, etc. The mechanisms that suppliers use to create a part, whether it’s a filament dispositio­n, melting or chemical bonding of powders, can determine part sensitivit­ies. Another potential solution is to go by major categories as each type of process has certain weakness, which will drive specificat­ions.

A ONE-STOP AM SHOP

To gain broader industry acceptance, suppliers like BASF must develop material specificat­ions that perform and are cost effective. On the OEM and Tier 1 customer side, there has to be a known commodity to analytical­ly design with, just like with convention­ally constructe­d parts.

BASF’s Ultrasim virtual engineerin­g software can help with this. Ultrasim characteri­ses and optimises the behaviour of specific materials in the additive manufactur­ing process. Through computer-aided engineerin­g (CAE), Ultrasim simulates new ways to reshape a part and shows how to get more out of it than by using traditiona­l techniques, creating designs that are additive manufactur­ing-ready.

THE TIME IS NOW FOR ADDITIVE MANUFACTUR­ING

“Inaction is our greatest competitor. The risks are huge for automakers not willing to embrace additive manufactur­ing and take advantage of the benefits it provides. When successful­ly adopted, we’ll be able to produce vehicles quicker at very low investment,” said Michael Whitens, advisor for BASF 3D Printing Solutions.

BASF anticipate­s that additive manufactur­ing will expand dramatical­ly in the future, moving from simple use cases like fixtures to low volumes for niche vehicles like the Vision Venture camper. These advancemen­ts will come in different phases and eventually reach high volume production in the years to come.

To learn more about our complete automotive portfolio, contact BASFAutomo­tiveSoluti­ons@ basf.com.

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