Spaces:
Runtime error
Runtime error
coursera-qa-bot
/
docs
/02_module-1-what-is-3d-printing
/04_more-3d-printing-insights
/02_3d-printing-vs-additive-manufacturing-mark-cotteleer.en.txt
| [MUSIC] Hi, I'm here in Youngstown, Ohio at the National Additive | |
| Manufacturing Innovation Institute, also known as America Makes, | |
| which is a lot easier to say. America Makes is a really | |
| interesting operation. It began in 2012, started by the Obama | |
| Administration as way to reinvigorate American manufacturing using 3D printing | |
| and atom manufacturing technology. Now America used to be a country | |
| that made lots of things. I grew up in a factory town. My grandfather made ball bearings for | |
| 45 years. My grandmother worked in | |
| a clothespin factory. But over the past 15, 20, 25 years, | |
| you see increasingly less and less made by American companies. So America Makes is designed to | |
| reinvigorate this manufacturing ethos. It's a unique public and private | |
| partnership, again, founded by the U.S. Government. But you'll see filmed | |
| machines donated by large and small 3D printing companies, such as | |
| MakerBot, Stratysys, and 3D Systems. I'm here today to talk to | |
| you about Mark Cotteleer. Mark is a consultant for Deloitte. In fact, he's their specialist on | |
| 3D printing item manufacturing. He's going to talk about | |
| the difference between the two and how what you're learning here in this | |
| course, about desktop 3D printing, can be applied to much broader manufacturing | |
| techniques at a factory scale. Let's go find Mark, and | |
| learn about additive manufacturing. Come on. Well Mark, thank you for | |
| taking the time to be with us today. >> It's good to be here Eric. >> Can you start off by telling us | |
| a bit about your 3D printing story? How you became interested | |
| in this technology? >> So I've been involved in 3D printing or | |
| additive manufacturing, you'll hear me call it | |
| additive manufacturing, at an industrial scale for | |
| about three years now. And Deloitte is one of the largest | |
| professional services firms in the world. We have a very advanced technology | |
| practice where we help our clients understand how to take both manufacturing | |
| and information technologies and deploy them in pursuit of | |
| value inside their businesses. And when we looked around and said what | |
| are the critical technologies that we're going to need to be able to help | |
| our clients understand for the future. Additive manufacturing, | |
| 3D printing was clearly one of them. Additive manufacturing | |
| is not a new technology. The original process, stereolithography, | |
| was invented over 30 years ago. The technology used to be | |
| referred to as rapid prototyping. What we're seeing now | |
| is a bit of a breakout. The technologies have advanced to | |
| a point where the economics and the quality is sufficient to actually | |
| move into final part production. We have done quite a bit | |
| of work in aerospace and defense and in military applications. Trying to understand how additive | |
| manufacturing can be used to either enhance sustainment, | |
| that is the ability of planes to fly, of equipment to run very rapidly. We're looking at supply | |
| chain applications, so how do we manage what we call | |
| long tail inventory applications? So maybe I have parts that | |
| I have to serve clients for products that might be decades old. And if someone orders that part, | |
| maybe the toolings not available, maybe the supplier's gone out of business, | |
| maybe I don't even have a design for it, and I need a way to manufacture it. So we're working with clients to | |
| understand how can I rapidly produce parts in a lot size of one in order | |
| to service that customer. We're working with clients to help them | |
| conceptualize how they can create entirely new products. By using the design capabilities | |
| that are enabled by additive manufacturing to either simplify | |
| the number of components that go in. So I can produce all as one piece instead | |
| of having to assemble multiple individual subcomponents. Or maybe I can redesign to take | |
| weight out using lattices, or taking nonessential material out of | |
| different parts of the component in order to reduce weight, or increase performance. Or we're seeing applications where we're | |
| enabling entirely new business models. Lots of really new exciting application | |
| areas for this particular technology. We're just getting started. Deloitte has its history in | |
| things like auditing and tax. But we are in fact one of the largest | |
| consulting firms in the world, and one of the most respected. We have leading practices in analytics, | |
| in supply chain and manufacturing operations, in lots of | |
| different areas, it might surprise you. So people should check | |
| out what all we're doing. We are interested in this space, both from | |
| the perspective of the technology itself, so how is it that we | |
| deploy these machines? But it's also important to | |
| recognize that these machines exist within what we refer to | |
| as the digital thread. That is, | |
| in order to allow this machine to work, we need an entire technology | |
| infrastructure built around it. We'll help a company design its | |
| additive manufacturing strategy. We'll help a company figure out | |
| what components are appropriate for being manufactured using | |
| additive manufacturing. We'll help them choose the equipment. We'll help them identify other | |
| partners they want to work with, what is the software, how does that | |
| digital thread all go together. And we'll help them secure it | |
| by using our cyber security services to actually make sure | |
| that nobody can hack into it. Which, if you think about it, | |
| can be a pretty big deal. And then we'll also help with | |
| the workforce transformation. So we have a big human capital practice that does all the change management | |
| around helping people understand how the change of this technology | |
| is going to impact their business. When we talk about the digital revolution, we have to extend even beyond | |
| additive manufacturing into, you could call it industry 4.0, | |
| you could call it smart manufacturing. You could call it the future | |
| of manufacturing. It goes back to this notion of the digital | |
| thread and to what we like to talk about as the physical to digital | |
| to physical transition. So we all live in a physical world, | |
| we interact with physical objects. But so much of the enablement of | |
| that world has become digital. That is, we use information technology in | |
| order to make ourselves more effective, more efficient, | |
| in order to improve our quality of life. And so, as manufacturers, | |
| as service providers, companies need to understand how to draw | |
| off information from the physical world. That could be about the state of | |
| the products that they produce. It could be about the demands that | |
| customers have for those products. And that maybe the individual | |
| customizations that they are looking for to make it personable to them, | |
| as individuals. The manufacturers need to be able to draw | |
| off all that information using sensors or other technologies. They need to be able to apply advanced | |
| analytics and other computing systems in order to make better decisions about | |
| what and where they want to produce. And then they need to actually | |
| transition back into the physical world. This is where additive manufacturing comes | |
| in, to produce the products that have the fit and form and performance that | |
| are required by customers today. And so all of these information and | |
| operations technologies have to work together in this overarching | |
| digital thread in order for a company to be successful | |
| in the 21st century. With additive manufacturing, | |
| that may include the ability to, eventually at least, mix materials, embed | |
| sensors so that we continue that virtuous cycle of going from the physical | |
| world to the digital world. To the physical world, to the digital | |
| world, to the physical world, to the digital world, on and on, always | |
| improving and serving our customer better. The difference very often is one | |
| of scale and precision when you look at the difference between say | |
| a desktop and industrial scale. So we have some of the models that you | |
| produce, and you've been working with this airplane model that you're | |
| producing using a desktop printer. That is a fused filament process | |
| that we often refer to as FDM, fused deposition modeling. This is a similar object made through | |
| a fused filament process as well, they look very similar. And the main distinction that you're | |
| going to find here between the desktop and the industrial scale is one of size. You can produce a much bigger part and | |
| one of precision. So you're going to see a much finer | |
| gradations depending on which of the machines you're using. Now these fused filament processes | |
| are getting better and better everyday. We also have other technologies. So you've talked about SLS in your class, | |
| selective laser sintering. That's another process of | |
| additive manufacturing that is available at the industrial scale. This is the same object, same file, | |
| we just sent it to a different machine, that is produced out of another polymer or | |
| plastic material. In SLS, we're aiming a laser into a powder | |
| bed, again manufacturing layer by layer. And what you'll notice here, the obvious difference in the color, | |
| different materials. And so you've got different | |
| material capabilities, different mechanical | |
| characteristics between them. You'll also see some | |
| differences in precision. So this process, you can get to | |
| an even finer surface level. It's a powder-based system. That surface finish is determined by | |
| literally the grain size of the powder. We've also got one here. This is a selective laser | |
| melting process where we're actually producing | |
| out of stainless steel. Again, it's a powder bed process. Again, we're going layer by layer. And so the big differences are between | |
| what you are seeing on your desktop and what you are seeing in the industrial | |
| application is really one of the size of the process. The precision of the process, the variety | |
| of materials that you're able to use. Certainly the design principle. So, your students will perhaps be | |
| learning to design objects using a fused filament process. The learning of those design principles, | |
| of how to design for additive manufacturing, will be applicable | |
| in a variety of different spaces. Now it's important to recognize | |
| that different additive processes will yield different capabilities, and different opportunities to | |
| expand the design envelope. So what they're really learning here is | |
| that baseline, that foundation that's going to allow them to get a head | |
| start on the rest of the world. They're also going to | |
| learn to conceptualize the capabilities of | |
| additive manufacturing. So that when they get to that company or | |
| when they turn to their business and say hey, here's how additive manufacturing | |
| can really play a role in our broader manufacturing context. They're going to be much better prepared | |
| to have ideas about how to move that company forward using these technologies. The additive manufacturing space | |
| compared to conventional manufacturing, is still relatively small. But the important thing is | |
| that it's growing very fast. Additive manufacturing is not a panacea. It's not going to change everything. But it's going to change some things | |
| in really, very important ways. Additive manufacturing technologies offer | |
| the promise of addressing some really troubling, really challenging product | |
| design and supply chain issues. The market is growing at | |
| almost 30% per year and that's been sustained | |
| over quite a long time. So we're looking at a market that is | |
| growing by billions of dollars every year. There are academic studies | |
| that show that there can in fact be a return on investment for | |
| a home printer today. More likely than that, I think, | |
| is we are going to see a dipole model emerge sometime | |
| in the next five to ten years. Where your local big box retailer, | |
| or maybe your local hardware store, will begin to deploy these | |
| kinds of technologies. So when something goes wrong in your home, | |
| or when you have a product | |
| that you want to download. Perhaps you download and buy it, | |
| purchase a design from a service. You will send that over to your local | |
| shop and they will manufacture it for you, very much as America Makes did for | |
| these objects for us today. And then sometime, | |
| maybe not in the next five to ten years, we'll see that actually penetrate | |
| the home in a significant way. At Deloitte we have produced | |
| an online course, a MOOC. Go to www.dupress.com/3d-opportunity. We've got many perspectives that we'll | |
| look at individual dimensions of the additive manufacturing questions. And then we also have our online course, which is very similar to | |
| the course you're doing here. It's about three hours, | |
| a certificate credit. That they can walk through each | |
| of the seven ASTM processes for additive manufacturing. As well as a framework for understanding how additive | |
| manufacturing applies to the business. It's won awards, we've had lots of users. And we'd invite everybody to participate. Additive manufacturing, the universe | |
| of possibility is very broad and it's easy to get intimidated trying to | |
| figure out, what am I going to do first? Just get started, particularly again | |
| if you're a business that manufactures things, because your competitors | |
| are getting started. And this is an area where you want to | |
| learn and build capabilities over time. So, that you skill | |
| yourself as an individual. And so that you deliver those | |
| capabilities to your business, so that it can succeed in the long term. >> Don't be afraid to fail. >> Don't be afraid to fail. No. >> Well great job Marc, thank you so much. >> Thank you, | |
| it was a pleasure being here. >> Thank you. [MUSIC] |