4.6 Article

Value Chain Comparison of Additively and Conventionally Manufactured Multi-Cavity Tool Steel Inserts: An Injection Molding Industrial Case Study for High-Volume Production

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app122010410

Keywords

value chain; additive manufacturing; subtractive manufacturing; cost comparison; plant simulation; technology comparison; industry 4; 0

Funding

  1. European Union [721383]
  2. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [721383] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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This article presents a methodology for comparing additive and conventional subtractive technologies in the production of metal injection molding tools. The comparison is based on performance and cost analysis using computer simulation and economic analysis. It provides insights into potential production bottlenecks and major cost drivers in molding tool production.
Featured Application In this work, a methodology for the quantitative assessment of additive manufacturing and conventional manufacturing technology value chains is presented for the production of injection molding tools. The development of injection molding tools is an expensive, time-consuming, and resource-intensive process offering little to no flexibility to adapt to variations in product design. Metal additive manufacturing can be used to produce these tools in a cost-effective way. Nevertheless, in an industrial context, effective methods are missing for the selection of the most suitable technology for the given tooling project. This paper presents a method to compare process chains based on additive and conventional subtractive technologies for the manufacturing of metal tooling for injection molding. The comparison is based on a technology focused-performance analysis (TFPA) through computer simulation performed using Tecnomatix Plant Simulation developed by Siemens Digital Industries Software combined with a customized cost-benefit economic analysis tool. The analysis of the technology comparison highlights potential bottlenecks for production, such as the printing phase and the heat treatment. It also gives a deeper understanding of the technology maturity level of conventional milling machines against laser powder bed fusion machines. The result is that the total costs for an insert made by AM and CM are indeed rather similar (the cost difference between the two tooling process chains is lower than 5%). The cost analysis reveals major costs drivers in the production of high-performance molding tools, such as the cutting tools employed for the milling steps and their changeover frequency. The industrial case of a 32-cavity mold insert for plastic injection molding is used to perform the study, develop the analysis, and validate the results.

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