Environmental Assessment/Evaluation of 3D Printing and 3D Printing with Wood-PLA Composites- Case Study
Abstract
center dot In recent years, additive manufacturing has become a regular process in various industries, and consequently there is an increasing need to evaluate the environmental aspects of this technology and its associated materials. In this paper, comparative cradle -to -grave life cycle assessments between a conventional product and a 3D -printed alternative made of polylactic acid (PLA) and PLA-wood material were investigated based on the standard ISO 14044:2006. The environmental impact of each product was quantified for 18 categories. The goal of life cycle assessment (LCA) was to determine whether the use of 3D printed PLA/PLA-wood products can be a sustainable alternative to traditional metal products. The paper presents a case study in which a comparative LCA was conducted. The results show that a metal part manufactured using conventional subtractive processes (milling, drilling, welding, etc.) has a higher environmental impact compared to 3D -printed alternatives made from r...enewable materials. However, there are many sub -issues that need to be adequately addressed.
Keywords:
wood-PLA composite / life cycle assessment / environmental impact / carbon footprint / 3D printingSource:
Drvna industrija, 2024, 75, 1, 49-58Funding / projects:
- Slovenian Research Agency (ARRS) [P4-0015]
DOI: 10.5552/drvind.2024.0107
ISSN: 0012-6772
WoS: 001180402400011
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85186757109
Collections
Institution/Community
Šumarski fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Tomec, Dasa Krapez AU - Oblak, Leon AU - Kuzman, Manja Kitek AU - Glavonjić, Branko AU - Govedić, Teja Bizjak PY - 2024 UR - https://omorika.sfb.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1493 AB - center dot In recent years, additive manufacturing has become a regular process in various industries, and consequently there is an increasing need to evaluate the environmental aspects of this technology and its associated materials. In this paper, comparative cradle -to -grave life cycle assessments between a conventional product and a 3D -printed alternative made of polylactic acid (PLA) and PLA-wood material were investigated based on the standard ISO 14044:2006. The environmental impact of each product was quantified for 18 categories. The goal of life cycle assessment (LCA) was to determine whether the use of 3D printed PLA/PLA-wood products can be a sustainable alternative to traditional metal products. The paper presents a case study in which a comparative LCA was conducted. The results show that a metal part manufactured using conventional subtractive processes (milling, drilling, welding, etc.) has a higher environmental impact compared to 3D -printed alternatives made from renewable materials. However, there are many sub -issues that need to be adequately addressed. T2 - Drvna industrija T1 - Environmental Assessment/Evaluation of 3D Printing and 3D Printing with Wood-PLA Composites- Case Study EP - 58 IS - 1 SP - 49 VL - 75 DO - 10.5552/drvind.2024.0107 UR - conv_1769 ER -
@article{ author = "Tomec, Dasa Krapez and Oblak, Leon and Kuzman, Manja Kitek and Glavonjić, Branko and Govedić, Teja Bizjak", year = "2024", abstract = "center dot In recent years, additive manufacturing has become a regular process in various industries, and consequently there is an increasing need to evaluate the environmental aspects of this technology and its associated materials. In this paper, comparative cradle -to -grave life cycle assessments between a conventional product and a 3D -printed alternative made of polylactic acid (PLA) and PLA-wood material were investigated based on the standard ISO 14044:2006. The environmental impact of each product was quantified for 18 categories. The goal of life cycle assessment (LCA) was to determine whether the use of 3D printed PLA/PLA-wood products can be a sustainable alternative to traditional metal products. The paper presents a case study in which a comparative LCA was conducted. The results show that a metal part manufactured using conventional subtractive processes (milling, drilling, welding, etc.) has a higher environmental impact compared to 3D -printed alternatives made from renewable materials. However, there are many sub -issues that need to be adequately addressed.", journal = "Drvna industrija", title = "Environmental Assessment/Evaluation of 3D Printing and 3D Printing with Wood-PLA Composites- Case Study", pages = "58-49", number = "1", volume = "75", doi = "10.5552/drvind.2024.0107", url = "conv_1769" }
Tomec, D. K., Oblak, L., Kuzman, M. K., Glavonjić, B.,& Govedić, T. B.. (2024). Environmental Assessment/Evaluation of 3D Printing and 3D Printing with Wood-PLA Composites- Case Study. in Drvna industrija, 75(1), 49-58. https://doi.org/10.5552/drvind.2024.0107 conv_1769
Tomec DK, Oblak L, Kuzman MK, Glavonjić B, Govedić TB. Environmental Assessment/Evaluation of 3D Printing and 3D Printing with Wood-PLA Composites- Case Study. in Drvna industrija. 2024;75(1):49-58. doi:10.5552/drvind.2024.0107 conv_1769 .
Tomec, Dasa Krapez, Oblak, Leon, Kuzman, Manja Kitek, Glavonjić, Branko, Govedić, Teja Bizjak, "Environmental Assessment/Evaluation of 3D Printing and 3D Printing with Wood-PLA Composites- Case Study" in Drvna industrija, 75, no. 1 (2024):49-58, https://doi.org/10.5552/drvind.2024.0107 ., conv_1769 .