Effective Integration of Additive Manufacturing at a Large Manufacturing Company

Additive manufacturing (AM) has the potential to create significant value at large manufacturing companies such as Corning, but to date adoption has been slow. Corning invested in AM early, establishing a central AM team in 2006. While the team has developed technical AM expertise and supports numer...

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Main Author: Fabian, Andrew S.
Other Authors: Roemer, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139139
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author Fabian, Andrew S.
author2 Roemer, Thomas
author_facet Roemer, Thomas
Fabian, Andrew S.
author_sort Fabian, Andrew S.
collection MIT
description Additive manufacturing (AM) has the potential to create significant value at large manufacturing companies such as Corning, but to date adoption has been slow. Corning invested in AM early, establishing a central AM team in 2006. While the team has developed technical AM expertise and supports numerous projects, there are a number of organizational and technical challenges limiting the more effective integration of AM at Corning. These challenges include lack of AM knowledge across the company, lack of a coordinated AM effort, conflicting financial expectations, and technical limitations. Despite these challenges, the Corning AM team has developed successful practices such as a tailored business model for supporting projects and an internally recognized level of technical expertise that has led to a number of wins including repeat customers and direct involvement in a project considering AM for high-volume production. To support more effective integration and adoption of AM, this research proposes a framework for understanding these challenges and five best practice initiatives to overcome them: spread AM in-depth knowledge through targeted training to better educate stakeholders, provide clear information about AM capabilities and costs, coordinate AM efforts across the company, leverage relationships to overcome organizational inertia, and identify and invest in high impact technical gaps. To further support AM adoption, this research proposes a roadmap for the qualification of metal Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) AM for high volume production, a pre-identified technical gap. This is a need of a high-profile project at Corning which has design requirements that make AM a prime production candidate. This roadmap provides a thorough understanding of qualification processes and requirements for AM, allowing for a reduction of technical and financial risk for projects utilizing AM for production.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1391392022-01-15T03:10:56Z Effective Integration of Additive Manufacturing at a Large Manufacturing Company Fabian, Andrew S. Roemer, Thomas Fang, Nicholas Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering Sloan School of Management Additive manufacturing (AM) has the potential to create significant value at large manufacturing companies such as Corning, but to date adoption has been slow. Corning invested in AM early, establishing a central AM team in 2006. While the team has developed technical AM expertise and supports numerous projects, there are a number of organizational and technical challenges limiting the more effective integration of AM at Corning. These challenges include lack of AM knowledge across the company, lack of a coordinated AM effort, conflicting financial expectations, and technical limitations. Despite these challenges, the Corning AM team has developed successful practices such as a tailored business model for supporting projects and an internally recognized level of technical expertise that has led to a number of wins including repeat customers and direct involvement in a project considering AM for high-volume production. To support more effective integration and adoption of AM, this research proposes a framework for understanding these challenges and five best practice initiatives to overcome them: spread AM in-depth knowledge through targeted training to better educate stakeholders, provide clear information about AM capabilities and costs, coordinate AM efforts across the company, leverage relationships to overcome organizational inertia, and identify and invest in high impact technical gaps. To further support AM adoption, this research proposes a roadmap for the qualification of metal Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) AM for high volume production, a pre-identified technical gap. This is a need of a high-profile project at Corning which has design requirements that make AM a prime production candidate. This roadmap provides a thorough understanding of qualification processes and requirements for AM, allowing for a reduction of technical and financial risk for projects utilizing AM for production. M.B.A. S.M. 2022-01-14T14:52:14Z 2022-01-14T14:52:14Z 2021-06 2021-06-10T19:13:07.432Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139139 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Fabian, Andrew S.
Effective Integration of Additive Manufacturing at a Large Manufacturing Company
title Effective Integration of Additive Manufacturing at a Large Manufacturing Company
title_full Effective Integration of Additive Manufacturing at a Large Manufacturing Company
title_fullStr Effective Integration of Additive Manufacturing at a Large Manufacturing Company
title_full_unstemmed Effective Integration of Additive Manufacturing at a Large Manufacturing Company
title_short Effective Integration of Additive Manufacturing at a Large Manufacturing Company
title_sort effective integration of additive manufacturing at a large manufacturing company
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139139
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