Abstract

Additive manufacture (AM) is receiving significant attention globally, reflected in the volume of research being carried out to support the commercialisation of the technology for industrial applications and the interest shown by government and policy makers in the technology. The lack of distinction between 3D printing and AM, as well as the portrayal of some highly publicised applications, may imply that the technology is now firmly established. However, this is not the case. The aim of this study is to identify the current barriers to the progression of AM for end-use products from an industrial perspective and to understand the nature of those barriers. Case study research has been conducted with organisations in the UK aerospace, automotive, defence, heavy machinery and medical device industries. Eighteen barriers are identified: education, cost, design, software, materials, traceability, machine constraints, in-process monitoring, mechanical properties, repeatability, scalability, validation, standards, quality, inspection, tolerances, finishing and sterilisation. Explanation building and logic models are used to generalise the findings. The results are discussed in the context of current academic research on AM. The outcomes of this study help to inform the frontiers of research in AM and how AM research agendas can be aligned with the requirements for industrial applications.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe progression of additive manufacture (AM) has received international attention, with collaborative research, technology translation and commercialisation initiatives existing across the globe; America Makes in the USA (National Center for Defence Manufacturing and Machining, 2017), and High Value Manufacturing Catapults and the National Centre for Net Shape and Additive Manufacturing in the UK (Innovate UK, 2017; MTC Ltd, 2017)

  • Additive manufacture (AM) is receiving significant attention globally, reflected in the volume of research being carried out to support the commercialisation of the technology for industrial applications and the interest shown by government and policy makers in the technology

  • The progression of additive manufacture (AM) has received international attention, with collaborative research, technology translation and commercialisation initiatives existing across the globe; America Makes in the USA (National Center for Defence Manufacturing and Machining, 2017), and High Value Manufacturing Catapults and the National Centre for Net Shape and Additive Manufacturing in the UK (Innovate UK, 2017; MTC Ltd, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

The progression of additive manufacture (AM) has received international attention, with collaborative research, technology translation and commercialisation initiatives existing across the globe; America Makes in the USA (National Center for Defence Manufacturing and Machining, 2017), and High Value Manufacturing Catapults and the National Centre for Net Shape and Additive Manufacturing in the UK (Innovate UK, 2017; MTC Ltd, 2017). In the past 5 years, multiple reports have been published by government and collaborative research and industrial initiatives to understand the economic importance, strategic and challenges associated with progressing AM in the UK and Europe Ford and Despeisse (2016), present a case study analysis on the sustainability of AM in industry, drawn from open access information: company websites, news sources and academic publications. In the UK, the AM-UK Steering Group (2017a) have recently presented the AM-UK National Strategy. This strategy includes ranked and brief summaries of the challenges facing industry, collected from workshops and online surveys consulting 123 organisations (AM-UK Steering Group, 2017a; AM-UK Steering Group, 2017c; AM-UK Steering Group, 2017d). An academic study has yet to present an in-depth explanation on why

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