Sustainable Production First life cycle assessment of AM powder process completed
USA — 6K Additive has announced the results of an independent life cycle assessment (LCA) completed by leading sustainability and energy firm, Foresight Management. This is the first LCA of powder for additive manufacturing ever completed.
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An independent analysis conducted by Foresight Management sought to compare the quantifiable environmental impacts between traditional metal powder production methods and 6K Additive’s proprietary Unimelt process. The results show the Unimelt process significantly reduces environmental impact in the key areas of energy usage and global warming, potentially helping 6K Additive customers lower their carbon footprint using metal additive manufacturing.
Frank Roberts, 6K Additive president, said: “This assessment goes a long way in revealing how the Unimelt process exceeds traditional metal powder processing in environmentally important ways, while also pointing to the inefficiencies of atomization that currently plague AM material production. Sustainability is at the core of who we are at 6K Additive and providing our customers with quantifiable numbers related to the environment helps them move closer to zero carbon manufacturing with AM.”
Grand Rapids, MI based Foresight Management conducts life cycle assessments on products for companies to help them understand the impact their processes have on a global environmental scale. Their methodology includes primary and secondary data, as well as using professional Gabi software to provide data detailing environmental impact of sourcing, refining, and processing.
“This is a cradle-to-end user assessment of the Unimelt technology. We studied all known industrial processes from raw material acquisition and processing up through manufacturing and customer distribution,” explained Brad Van Valkenburg, sustainability manager at Foresight. “This assessment focused on nickel and titanium powders, both of which saw significant advantages when made using Unimelt process. The nickel results showed the UniMelt required 91 percent less energy and reduced carbon emissions by 92 percent and the titanium results showed the UniMelt required at minimum, 74 percent less energy and reduced carbon emissions by 78 percent.”
Organizations are starting to look to their suppliers to offer statistics that help them with their sustainability journey. Many companies are now asking for hard facts to back up sustainability claims and this study is to provide 6K Additive customers with information that helps them advance their additive manufacturing initiatives.
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