Study on the Effect of Scanning Strategy on Residual Stress in Laser Additive Manufacturing with the Laser Ultrasound Technique

Author(s):  
Y. Zhan ◽  
H. Xu ◽  
W. Du ◽  
C. Liu
2013 ◽  
Vol 431 ◽  
pp. 20-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
You Bin Lai ◽  
Wei Jun Liu ◽  
Ji Bin Zhao ◽  
Yu Hui Zhao ◽  
Fu Yu Wang ◽  
...  

The residual stress in laser additive manufacturing titanium alloy sample was measured using indentation stress measurement method. The residual stress variation formulas was fitted with the major process parameters such as laser power, scanning speed, the powder feed rate etc.. It was studied that the influence of processing layers and scanning corner on the specimen residual stress. The results show that the specimen residual stress increases first and then decreases with the increase of processing layers, and the maximum appears in the fiftieth layer, in addition, the residual stress in the side of corner sample is mainly pressure stress, the maximum appearing in the 150°scanning angle, the minimum appearing in the 120°scanning angle. Therefore, it can reduce the overall sample residual stress effectively by an obtuse angle scanning trajectory.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 4813
Author(s):  
Zhaohui Ren ◽  
Xingwen Zhang ◽  
Yunhe Wang ◽  
Zhuhong Li ◽  
Zhen Liu

This study aimed to analyze the defects of large residual stress in laser additive manufacturing metal parts by establishing a milling numerical simulation of Ti6Al4V titanium alloy thin-walled parts based on the Johnson-Cook constitutive model of Ti6Al4V titanium alloy, a modified Coulomb friction stress model, the physical chip separation criterion and other theories, combined with the finite element software ABAQUS. The influences of milling depth, initial temperature and milling speed on the forming quality of the formed part were analyzed. The results show that milling changes the residual stress distribution of the deposition layer, which can reduce or even change the residual tensile stress on the surface of the deposition layer produced by the additive manufacturing process into compressive stress, and the equivalent Mises stress decreases by 47% compared with the original forming surface. When the initial temperature increases from 20 °C to 400 °C, the maximum equivalent Mises stress of the milling surface decreases by 26%.


Metals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (11) ◽  
pp. 1830
Author(s):  
Jakob Schröder ◽  
Alexander Evans ◽  
Tatiana Mishurova ◽  
Alexander Ulbricht ◽  
Maximilian Sprengel ◽  
...  

Laser-based additive manufacturing methods allow the production of complex metal structures within a single manufacturing step. However, the localized heat input and the layer-wise manufacturing manner give rise to large thermal gradients. Therefore, large internal stress (IS) during the process (and consequently residual stress (RS) at the end of production) is generated within the parts. This IS or RS can either lead to distortion or cracking during fabrication or in-service part failure, respectively. With this in view, the knowledge on the magnitude and spatial distribution of RS is important to develop strategies for its mitigation. Specifically, diffraction-based methods allow the spatial resolved determination of RS in a non-destructive fashion. In this review, common diffraction-based methods to determine RS in laser-based additive manufactured parts are presented. In fact, the unique microstructures and textures associated to laser-based additive manufacturing processes pose metrological challenges. Based on the literature review, it is recommended to (a) use mechanically relaxed samples measured in several orientations as appropriate strain-free lattice spacing, instead of powder, (b) consider that an appropriate grain-interaction model to calculate diffraction-elastic constants is both material- and texture-dependent and may differ from the conventionally manufactured variant. Further metrological challenges are critically reviewed and future demands in this research field are discussed.


Author(s):  
Ehsan Malekipour ◽  
Homero Valladares ◽  
Yung Shin ◽  
Hazim El-Mounayri

Abstract Residual stress and manufacturing time are two serious challenges that hinder the widespread industry adoption and implementation of the powder-bed fusion (PBF) process. Commercial Multi-Laser PBF (ML-PBF) systems have been developed by several vendors in recent years, which dramatically increase the production rate by employing more heat sources (up to 4 laser beams). Although numerous research works conducted toward mitigation of the effects of residual stress on printed parts in the Single Laser PBF (SL-PBF) process, no research work on this topic has been reported for the ML-PBF process to date. One of the most efficient real-time approaches to mitigate the influence of residual stress and as such the process lead time effectively is to improve the scanning strategy. This approach can be also implemented effectively in the ML-PBF process. In this work, we extend the previously developed GAMP (Genetic Algorithm Maximum Path) strategy for optimizing the scanning path in ML-PBF. The E-GAMP (the Extended GAMP) strategy manipulates the printing topology of the islands and generates more thermally efficient scanning patterns for the chessboard scanning strategy in ML-PBF. This strategy extends the single thermal heat source to multiple ones (2 as well as 3 lasers). To validate the effectiveness of the proposed strategy, we simulate the thermal distribution throughout a simple rectangular layer by ABAQUS for both the traditional successive scanning strategy and the E-GAMP strategy. The results demonstrate that the E-GAMP strategy considerably decreases the manufacturing time while it reduces the maximum temperature gradient, or in other words, generates a more uniform temperature distribution throughout the exposure layer.


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