scholarly journals Microstructure, Mechanical Properties, and Martensitic Transformation in NiTi Shape Memory Alloy Fabricated Using Electron Beam Additive Manufacturing Technique

Author(s):  
Jan Dutkiewicz ◽  
Łukasz Rogal ◽  
Damian Kalita ◽  
Jakub Kawałko ◽  
Marek Stanisław Węglowski ◽  
...  

AbstractThe electron beam additive manufacturing (EBAM) method was applied in order to fabricate rectangular-shaped NiTi component. The process was performed using an electron beam welding system using wire feeder inside the vacuum chamber. NiTi wire containing 50.97 at.% Ni and showing martensitic transformation near room temperature was used. It allowed to obtain a good quality material consisting of columnar grains elongated into the built direction growing directly from the NiTi substrate, which is related to the epitaxial grain growth mechanism. As manufactured material showed martensitic and reverse transformations diffused over the temperature range from −10 to 44 °C, the applied aging at 500° C moved the transformation to higher temperatures and transformation peaks became sharper. The highest recoverable strain of about 3.5% was obtained in the as-deposited sample deformed along the deposition direction. In the case of deformation of the alloy aged at 500 °C for 2h, the formation of martensite occurs at significantly lower stress; however, at about 2.5% the stress begins to increase gradually and only a small shape recovery was observed due to a higher martensitic transformation temperature. In situ SEM tensile deformation in the direction perpendicular to deposition direction showed that the martensite began to appear at the surface of the sample and at the grain boundaries due to heterogeneous nucleation. In situ studies allowed to determine the following crystallographic relationships between B2 and B19’ martensite: (100)B2||(100)B19’ and (100) B2 || (011)B19’; (011)B2|| (001)B19’ and $${(011)}_{\mathrm{B}2}||{\left(11\bar{1 }\right)}_{\mathrm{B}1{9}^{\mathrm{^{\prime}}}}$$ ( 011 ) B 2 | | 11 1 ¯ B 1 9 ′ . Samples aged at 500 °C exhibited fully austenitic microstructure; however, with increasing degree of deformation, the formation of martensite was observed. The majority of needles were tilted about 45° with respect to the tensile direction, and the presence of type I (11 $$\bar{1 }$$ 1 ¯ ) invariant twin boundaries was observed at higher degrees of deformation.

2020 ◽  
Vol 19 (01) ◽  
pp. 107-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Borrelli ◽  
S. Franchitti ◽  
C. Pirozzi ◽  
L. Carrino ◽  
L. Nele ◽  
...  

Additive manufacturing (AM), applied to metal industry, is a family of processes that allows complex shape components to be realized from raw materials in the form of powders. Electron beam melting (EBM) is a relatively new additive manufacturing (AM) technology. Similar to electron-beam welding, EBM utilizes a high-energy electron beam as a moving heat source to melt metal powder, and 3D parts are produced in a layer-building fashion by rapid self-cooling. By EBM, it is possible to realize metallic complex shape components, e.g. fine network structures, internal cavities and channels, which are difficult to make by conventional manufacturing means. This feature is of particular interest in titanium industry in which numerous efforts are done to develop near net shape processes. In the field of mechanical engineering and, in particular, in the aerospace industry, it is crucial for quality certification purpose that components are produced through qualified and robust manufacturing processes ensuring high product repeatability. The contribution of the present work is to experimentally identify the EBM job parameters (sample orientation, location of the sample in the layer and height in the build chamber) that influence the dimensional accuracy and the surface roughness of the manufactured parts in Ti6Al4V. The repeatability of EBM is investigated too.


2020 ◽  
Vol 307 ◽  
pp. 111983 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiaqi Guo ◽  
Anguo Huang ◽  
Renzhi Hu ◽  
Haiying Xu ◽  
Guang Yang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
A. Förner ◽  
J. Vollhüter ◽  
D. Hausmann ◽  
C. Arnold ◽  
P. Felfer ◽  
...  

AbstractMaterials processed by additive manufacturing often exhibit a very fine-scaled microstructures due to high cooling rates in the process. In this study, single-layer surface electron beam melting is used to create very high cooling rates similar to additive manufacturing processes to investigate the resulting microstructure. In the case of Nb-Si-Cr in-situ composites, a nano-scaled eutectic microstructure is beneficial for improving the mechanical and oxidational properties. Fast solidification results in the formation of supersaturated phases of Nbss and Cr2Nb with phase diameters down to 10 nm as well as in the stabilization of the metastable Nb9(Cr,Si)5 phase at room temperature. After processing with different solidification rates, the decomposition of the Nb9(Cr,Si)5 phase has been studied in detail with atom probe microscopy. The stabilization of mixed silicide phases by electron beam melting shows a new pathway for improving hardness and enhancing oxidation resistance of nanostructured eutectic in-situ composites, by which the inherent weaknesses of Nb-Si-Cr can be overcome without further alloying elements. Graphical Abstract


2022 ◽  
Vol 1213 (1) ◽  
pp. 012002
Author(s):  
N Resnina ◽  
I A Palani ◽  
S Belyaev ◽  
R Bikbaev ◽  
Shalini Singh ◽  
...  

Abstract The influence of the annealing temperature on the recoverable strain variation on cooling and heating under a stress of 200 MPa was studied in the NiTi samples produced by wire arc additive manufacturing. The samples including the Ni-rich NiTi layer in the working length were annealed for 10 hours at various temperature from 450 to 600 °C. It is shown that an increase in annealing temperature leads to non-monontonic variation in the recoverable strain. This is caused by an increase in annealing temperature from 450 to 550 °C increases the volume fraction of Ni4Ti3 precipitates. As a result, the volume fraction of the NiTi phase undergoing the martensitic transformation and recoverable strain decrease. An increase in annealing temperature from 550 to 600 °C leads to a dissolving the Ni4Ti3 precipitates and formation of the Ni3Ti2 precipitates that increases the volume fraction of the NiTi phase and the recoverable strain.


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