Electron Beam Melting of Metastable Austenitic Stainless Steel Processing – Microstructure – Mechanical Properties
-
- Englisch ausgewählt
Fr. 54.90
inkl. gesetzl. MwSt.,
Beschreibung
Produktdetails
Einband
Taschenbuch
Erscheinungsdatum
25.08.2020
Abbildungen
mit 23 Farbabbildungen
Verlag
Kassel University PressSeitenzahl
149
Maße (L/B/H)
21/14.8/1.1 cm
Gewicht
224 g
Sprache
Englisch
ISBN
978-3-7376-0848-0
results obtained by the author, which contribute to a deeper understanding of the fatigue behavior of SLM as well as EBM manufactured Ti-6Al-4V. For the sake of readability and the structure of the present dissertation, the main findings of the studies are summarized within the theoretical foundations. They are revisited in the results section as they are essential for a comprehension of the outstanding characteristics of the investigated alloy. The primary focus of this work is the
processing – microstructure – property correlation of EBM manufactured high-alloyed austenitic CrMnNi stainless steel. Independent of the applied process parameters, to this point this alloy exhibits a fine-grained and weak textured microstructure in the as-built state upon EBM processing. As detailed in the literature review, this is opposite to numerous alloys like the benchmark AISI 316L stainless steel, which are commonly characterized by epitaxial growth of columnar grains elongated parallel to building direction. A theory for this unusual observation is presented based on a grain refinement due the process-inherent cyclic heat-treatment, i.e. repetitive reheating and partial melting of the consolidated material due to the energy input during melting of subsequent layers and resulting solid-liquid as well as solid-solid (ferritic bcc to austenitic fcc phase and vice versa) phase transformations. A calculation of the phase diagram, differential thermal II Abstract analysis and the investigation of the uppermost layers of bulky and thin-walled EBM processed structures are conducted to support this assumption. Moreover, the CrMnNi stainless steel specimens are characterized by an outstanding damage tolerance, which is demonstrated by tensile testing and examination of the fracture surfaces revealing large lack-of-fusion defects due to unsuitable process parameters. Combined EBSD and X-ray diffraction analysis attribute the high damage tolerance to a pronounced strain hardening and mitigation of the effect of defects due to the transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) effect. The deformation-induced martensitic transformation and associated strain hardening has also been correlated to a considerable low-cycle fatigue performance even under the presence of large inhomogeneities.
The chemical composition of the alloy upon EBM processing is strongly dependent on the process parameters, i.e. it is demonstrated that the evaporation rate of Mn varies with the scan strategy and volumetric energy density. This phenomenon is utilized for the fabrication of homogeneous specimens with different Mn concentrations and resulting mechanical properties.These findings are subsequently employed for a prove-of-concept of the possibility to produce
functionally graded material by a spatial adjustment of the scan strategy throughout the layer-wise built-up of objects. This is a novel approach for the synthetization of functionally graded materials based on the processing of one homogenous precursor powder feedstock. In summary, the particular CrMnNi stainless steel is introduced as a novel alloy design for
AM because it addresses current material-related issues inherent in layer-wise technologies and potentially further contributes to the exploitation of the full potential of AM.
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