Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)

Logo UNIME
  • ×
  • Home
  • Degrees
  • Courses
  • Jobs
  • People
  • Outputs
  • Organizations
  • Third Mission
  • Expertise & Skills

Expertise & Skills
Logo UNIME

|

UNIFIND - Expertise & Skills

unime.it
  • ×
  • Home
  • Degrees
  • Courses
  • Jobs
  • People
  • Outputs
  • Organizations
  • Third Mission
  • Expertise & Skills
  1. Outputs

A Review on Reverse Engineering for Sustainable Metal Manufacturing: From 3D Scans to Simulation-Ready Models

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2026
abstract:
Reverse engineering (RE) has been increasingly adopted in metal manufacturing to digitize legacy parts, connect “as-is” geometry to mechanical performance, and enable agile repair and remanufacturing. This review consolidates scan-to-simulation workflows that transform 3D measurement data (optical/laser scanning and X-ray computed tomography) into simulation-ready models for structural assessment and manufacturing decisions, with an explicit focus on sustainability. Key steps are reviewed, from acquisition planning and metrological error sources to point-cloud/mesh processing, CAD/feature reconstruction, and geometry preparation for finite-element analysis (watertightness, defeaturing, meshing strategies, and boundary condition transfer). Special attention is given to uncertainty quantification and the propagation of geometric deviations into stress, stiffness, and fatigue predictions, enabling robust accept/reject and repair/replace choices. Sustainability is addressed through a lightweight reporting framework covering material losses, energy use, rework, and lead time across the scan–model–simulate–manufacture chain, clarifying when digitalization reduces scrap and over-processing. Industrial use cases are discussed for high-value metal components (e.g., molds, turbine blades, and marine/energy parts) where scan-informed simulation supports faster and more reliable decision making. Open challenges are summarized, including benchmark datasets, standardized reporting, automation of feature recognition, and integration with repair process simulation (DED/WAAM) and life-cycle metrics. A checklist is proposed to improve reproducibility and comparability across RE studies.
Iris type:
14.a.1 Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
reverse engineering; metal manufacturing; 3D scanning; X-ray computed tomography (XCT); scan-to-CAD; scan-to-simulation; finite element analysis (FEA); sustainability
List of contributors:
Abdalla, Elnaeem; Panfiglio, Simone; Parisi, Mariasofia; Di Bella, Guido
Authors of the University:
ABDALLA ELNAEEM ABDALLA BABIKER
DI BELLA Guido
PANFIGLIO SIMONE
PARISI MARIASOFIA
Handle:
https://iris.unime.it/handle/11570/3349069
Published in:
APPLIED SCIENCES
Journal
  • Overview

Overview

URL

https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/16/3/1229
  • Guide
  • Help
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Use of cookies
  • Legal notes

Powered by VIVO | Designed by Cineca | 26.4.5.0