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Diseño para Fabricación y Ensamblaje×Rebanado en Fabricación Aditiva×
CampoManufacturaManufactura
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen19941990s
Autor originalBoothroyd, G., Dewhurst, P.Deckard, C. R. et al.
TipoSystematic approach to cost-effective product designComputational method for additive manufacturing
Fuente seminalBoothroyd, G., Dewhurst, P., & Knight, W. A. (1994). Product Design for Manufacturing and Assembly (1st ed.). Marcel Dekker. ISBN: 0-8247-9157-6Ngo, T. D., Kashani, A., Imbalzano, G., Nguyen, K. T., & Hui, D. (2018). Additive manufacturing (3D printing): A review of materials, methods, applications and challenges. Composites Part B: Engineering, 143, 172-196. DOI ↗
AliasDFMA, Design for manufacturability, DFA3D printing slicing, Layer generation, Mesh slicing
Relacionados44
ResumenDesign for Manufacturing and Assembly (DFMA) is a systematic methodology for creating products that are inherently easier and less expensive to manufacture and assemble. Developed by Boothroyd, Dewhurst, and Knight, DFMA evaluates design choices based on their impact on production cost, quality, and speed, guiding designers toward solutions that balance performance, manufacturability, and economics.Additive manufacturing slicing is the computational process of converting a three-dimensional CAD model into a series of two-dimensional cross-sectional layers that are sequentially built up by 3D printing hardware. Developed during the early maturation of stereolithography and selective laser sintering in the 1990s, this method bridges the gap between digital design and physical fabrication, enabling rapid prototyping and production of complex geometries.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Design for Manufacturing and Assembly · Additive Manufacturing Slicing. Recuperado el 2026-06-19 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare