Additive manufacturing (AM), commonly known as 3D printing, is a process for creating three-dimensional objects by building them layer by layer from digital models, typically using materials like plastics, metals, ceramics, or resins. Unlike traditional subtractive manufacturing, which removes material from a solid block, AM adds material precisely where needed, guided by computer-aided design (CAD) software.
Key Processes
AM encompasses several categories defined by standards like ISO/ASTM 52900, including:
Material Extrusion: Melts and extrudes material (e.g., thermoplastic filaments) through a nozzle to form layers, as in fused deposition modeling (FDM)—the most common method for consumer printers.
Powder Bed Fusion: Uses a laser or electron beam to fuse powdered material (e.g., selective laser sintering (SLS) or selective laser melting (SLM)) for metals and polymers.
Vat Photopolymerization: Cures liquid resin with light (e.g., stereolithography (SLA)) to solidify layers.
Binder Jetting: Deposits a binding agent onto powder to create parts, often for full-color prototypes or metals.
Material Jetting: Sprays material droplets that solidify, similar to inkjet printing.
Directed Energy Deposition: Melts metal wire or powder with focused energy for repairs or large-scale builds.
Sheet Lamination: Bonds sheets of material (e.g., paper or metal) and cuts them to shape.
How It Works
Design Phase: Create or scan a 3D model using CAD software, then slice it into thin layers via specialized software.
Printing Phase: The machine deposits or solidifies material layer by layer, building from the bottom up.
Post-Processing: May involve cleaning, curing, sanding, or heat treatment to refine the object.
Applications
AM is used across industries for prototyping, production, and customization:
Aerospace and Automotive: Lightweight, complex parts like engine components or custom tools.
Healthcare: Prosthetics, implants, dental aligners, and even bioprinted tissues.
Consumer Goods: Jewelry, footwear, and electronics housings.
Construction: Large-scale printing of buildings or bridges.
Food and Fashion: Edible items or custom apparel.
Advantages
Enables complex geometries impossible with traditional methods.
Reduces material waste and supports on-demand production.
Speeds up prototyping and allows for personalization.
Lowers costs for small-batch manufacturing.
Disadvantages
Slower for mass production compared to injection molding.
Material limitations, such as strength or surface finish issues.
High initial equipment costs and energy use.
Potential intellectual property concerns with easy replication.
Recent advancements as of 2025 include AI-integrated designs for better materials (e.g., synthetic bones) and larger printers for industrial-scale applications. AM continues to evolve, blending with technologies like AI and robotics for more efficient, sustainable manufacturing.
Additive Manufacturing is an appropriate name to describe the technologies that build 3D objects by adding layer-upon-layer of material, whether the material is plastic, metal, concrete or one day…..human tissue.
Common to AM technologies is the use of a computer, 3D modeling software (Computer Aided Design or CAD), machine equipment and layering material. Once a CAD sketch is produced, the AM equipment reads in data from the CAD file and lays downs or adds successive layers of liquid, powder, sheet material or other, in a layer-upon-layer fashion to fabricate a 3D object.
You can find out more by reading this article.
What exactly does the Additive Manufacturing Describe? It’s simple, If you Know the conventional way of manufacturing a product, and i want to make a small stepped shaft using a lathe machine then what i do is I’ll take a circular billet with a diameter greater or equal to the highest measured diameter of the stepped shaft, using the lathe machine i’ll remove the material to reduce the shaft diameter to the required dimension, so what happens is that there is a removal of material from the parent metal, in this process there is a wastage of material to get the required product. Whereas in the additive manufacturing the product is made layer by layer using a 3D printer after designing the required shaft using any CAD modelling softwares. The printer prints the model in such a way that there is no wastage of the material, the interesting fact is that a laser beam sintered on the powdered metal and this process is done by using Selective Laser Sintering 3D Printer
The Following link explains about additive manufaturing
http://www.spilasers.com/application-additive-manufacturing/additive-manufacturing-a-definition/
You can Know all about 3D printing in the following link
https://www.creativemechanisms.com/blog/everything-you-need-to-know-about-3d-printing