IDEA LEAGUE SUMMER SCHOOL 2021

Computational Design for Additive Manufacturing

Computational Design for Additive Manufacturing, IDEA League Summer School 2021

Organizing Committee:  Serena Graziosi, Tino Stankovic, Nicholas Meisel, Zjenja Dubrovski, Jun Wu, Martin Schütz (ETHZ)

Invited speakers:  Richard Bibb (Loughborough University), Jochen Mueller (Johns Hopkins University), José Pinto Duarte (Penn State College of Arts and Architecture), Shadi Nazarian (Penn State College of Arts and Architecture), Timon Rijnaarts (Ultimaker) and Sylvain Lefebvre (Inria - French national research institute for digital science and technology) 

This summer school focused on computational design which is essential for effectively exploring the large design space Additive Manufacturing offers and thus to reach the full potential of this manufacturing method.

Additive Manufacturing (AM, also known as 3D printing) technologies are nowadays continuously evolving in terms of processable materials, resolution, printing volumes and quality. This evolution is extending design boundaries; it is also pushing the development of cutting-edge and high-added value ideas in a wide range of fields, from biomedical to architecture, from aerospace to product design and computer graphics. Designers have now the possibility to explore and develop tailored and advanced solutions by exploiting the potentialities of these technologies at the design level. Functional integration, multi-material printing, local and multi-scale tuning of properties, organic shapes are only a few of the design opportunities nowadays available. However, the proper exploitation of such a wide range of opportunities is calling for a new mindset which is strongly multidisciplinary and capable of mastering interlinked requirements. The innovativeness of a 3D-printed solution relies on the ability to successfully reach the optimum among materials properties, digital modelling and the control of the manufacturing process. The building of in-depth and multidisciplinary knowledge on all these aspects is fundamental but not sufficient. It is only through the proper development and implementation of design methods, tools and processes that ideas can be transformed into innovative 3D-printed products.

Design for Additive Manufacturing (DfAM) means creating the appropriate design mindset for exploiting the maximum potentialities of AM technologies. This exploitation should occur in every phase of the process, from the idea generation to the post-processing step. Computational and algorithm-based design strategies are essential to the creation of such a mindset; they help designers to master the potential of AM technologies both at the design and fabrication level. Successful implementation of these strategies will stimulate the exploration of the design space, model complex and multidisciplinary phenomena, and to enable the advanced control of the fabrication process.

The programme aimed to:

  • Explain the fundamentals and challenges associated with AM technologies
  • Explain the fundamentals of computational DfAM support methods
  • Apply the digital workflow (scanning-computational design-digital fabrication) for customized product design
  • Apply state-of-the-art computational design tools and methods to design for AM
  • Identify appropriate and innovative application scenarios for AM

The summer school took place on:

Monday, 05/Jul/2021 -- Friday, 16/Jul/2021

hosted virtually over the Microsoft Teams platform

Please sign in to your account

This site uses cookies and other tracking technologies to assist with navigation and your ability to provide feedback, analyse your use of our products and services, assist with our promotional and marketing efforts, and provide content from third parties. Privacy Policy.