Autor: Adrian Huwer

Sustainability in Industrial Manufacturing

Sustainability in Industrial Manufacturing

Resource-efficient circular economy through the use of a pellet 3D printer
Bruno Gallace, Michael Blug, Adrian Huwer ORCID Icon, Michael Mattern, Michael Wahl
In additive manufacturing – which is also known as 3D printing – plastic waste is produced, for example in the form of required support structures or faulty prints. One option for resource recirculation in additive manufacturing is direct use in a pellet 3D printer that incorporates fused granulate fabrication (FGF). The elimination of the filament production process step reduces the manufacturing time and the energy required for recirculation.
Industry 4.0 Science | Volume 40 | 2024 | Edition 1 | Pages 14-21
Digital Product Optimisation for the Use of Additive Manufacturing

Digital Product Optimisation for the Use of Additive Manufacturing

Michael Wahl, Martin Bonenberger, Julian Morbach, Adrian Huwer ORCID Icon, Lauri Hoffmann
Additive manufacturing, i.e. the printing of three- dimensional workpieces from different materials, offers the possibility of quickly producing functional prototypes. Digital optimisation is an important building block for the rapid implementation of functional product ideas. Based on digital models, the product is virtually optimised and continuously improved. Once the product has been digitally optimised in terms of its properties, it is checked and, if necessary, adapted for additive manufacturing. The product is then manufactured, reworked and finally tested. The article shows the optimisation possibilities using the example of a dispenser from the food industry. An existing component is digitised, a flow optimisation is carried out on the digital model and the improved product is additively manufactured.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 38 | 2022 | Edition 5 | Pages 25-29 | DOI 10.30844/IM_22-5_25-29
Heterogeneous Fields of Application in Additive Manufacturing

Heterogeneous Fields of Application in Additive Manufacturing

Henrik te Heesen, Michael Wahl, Mats Bremer, Adrian Huwer ORCID Icon, Joachim Messemer
Additive manufacturing is a central component of the fourth industrial revolution, which was initiated a few years ago. The growing interconnection of machines and processes and the ever-increasing individualization of customer needs mean that manufacturers have to adapt to changing markets in a continual process due to global competition. The production of prototypes or individual series using machines that produce complex three-dimensional workpieces is becoming increasingly important for manufacturing companies and, thus, for research institutions in the training of qualified specialists.
Industrie 4.0 Management | Volume 36 | 2020 | Edition 4 | Pages 25-29 | DOI 10.30844/I40M_20-4_S25-29