Toward a Circular Economy in Deep Drawing: Remanufacturing End-of-Life Automotive Parts

Publikation: Beitrag in Buch oder TagungsbandVortrag mit Beitrag in TagungsbandBegutachtung

Abstract

Recycling aluminium typically involves energy-intensive melting processes. This study presents a more sustainable approach by directly remanufacturing deep-drawn parts from end-of-life aluminium automotive components. We used aluminium engine hoods as a source material, beginning with assessment of alloy composition and tensile properties. Dismantling operations and the removal of coating and adhesive bonds were studied to prepare the material. The blanks were then processed through deep drawing using various forming strategies, namely warm forming and W temper forming. The maximum draw depth achieved was 22 and 30 %, respectively, lower than with virgin sheet material, and surface quality was notably inferior. Despite these limitations, the findings highlight the feasibility of re-forming aluminium automotive scrap into deep-drawn components for specific applications, such as non-visible parts. Our approach aligns with circular economy goals, conserving resources, reducing carbon emissions, and maintaining material quality for demanding applications.
OriginalspracheDeutsch
Titel44th Conference of the International Deep Drawing Research Group (IDDRG 2025)
Seitenumfang2
Band408
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2025
Veranstaltung44th Conference of the International Deep Drawing Research Group, IDDRG 2025 - Lissabon, Portugal
Dauer: 1 Juni 20255 Juni 2025

Publikationsreihe

NameMATEC Web of Conferences

Konferenz

Konferenz44th Conference of the International Deep Drawing Research Group, IDDRG 2025
KurztitelIDDRG 2025
Land/GebietPortugal
StadtLissabon
Zeitraum1/06/255/06/25

Research Field

  • Advanced Forming Processes and Components

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