scholarly journals Fabrication of nano-sized grains by pulsed laser surface melting

2010 ◽  
Vol 43 (9) ◽  
pp. 095402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengtao Wang ◽  
Hong Zhou ◽  
Pengyu lin ◽  
Na Sun ◽  
Qingchen Guo ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Utsavkumar Mistry ◽  
Madhu Vadali

Pulsed laser surface melting (pLSM) is a technique that offers an efficient and effective way to modify the geometry surfaces without any addition or removal of material. The resultant surface geometry plays a critical role in several applications. This paper presents a steady-state thin-film approximation of the melt pool created by pLSM and the resulting semi-analytical solution for the evolved surface geometry. These predictions of the semi-analytical solution are then compared with a validated numerical solution. The comparison demonstrates a good match with errors ranging from ~4% to ~25% across several pulse duration. Larger errors are observed at comparatively lower and higher pulse duration, and smaller errors are observed for intermediate pulse duration values. Overall, the thin film solution is a reasonable and useful approximation of the evolved surface geometry through the pLSM process, thus saving significant computational costs.


Author(s):  
Utsavkumar Mistry ◽  
Madhu Vadali

Abstract Pulsed Laser Surface Melting (pLSM) is a technique that offers an efficient way to modify the geometry surfaces without any addition or removal of material. In pLSM, an incident laser beam melts a small region on the surface and induces surface tension and viscosity-driven flows that modify the surface geometry. Initial surface geometry plays an important role in deciding the melt pool flows and shape as it governs the initial surface tension acting on the melt pool. In this paper, we present a systematic numerical study that captures the effects of initial geometries using a two-dimensional axisymmetric model. The results show that geometries with higher curvatures result in deeper melt pools and higher surface displacement because higher fluid velocities aid the convection heat transfer. Additionally, we define a modified capillary number (CaM) which elegantly captures these effects.


2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin D. Morrow ◽  
Frank E. Pfefferkorn

Laser surface melting is being increasingly used as a method of surface polishing steels and other alloys, but understanding the effect of this process on the microstructure and properties is still incomplete. This work experimentally explores several basic questions about how the surface microstructure and properties of S7 tool steel change during a pulsed laser micromelting (PLμM) process. Evaluations of the microstructure and hardness suggest that diffusion-controlled processes such as melt homogenization and surface back-tempering are relevant during rapid microscale laser melting and that the laser parameters and process planning contribute to determining the final surface hardness. The results also suggest that some influence can be exerted over the final hardness obtained from laser surface melting by changing the processing parameters.


Author(s):  
Taha Mattar ◽  
Ehab Abdel Rahman ◽  
Ahmed Abdel-Aziz ◽  
Haytham El-Gazzar

Aluminum is one of most common metals in all advanced and modern scientific and technological applications including electrical, electronic, chemical, engineering, energy and medical fields. The performance of aluminum alloys determines to large extent the quality and economic status of the different processes. Aluminum surface structure determine its performance where nano sized grains and layer can improve aluminum properties and performance. In this work, the improvement of aluminum surface structure and formation of nano structured surface grains by laser surface melting (LSM) using Nd-YAG laser under argon atmosphere was investigated. Different power and scanning speed were applied. The physical and chemical properties of the produced surfaces were examined. SEM, EDX and XRD analyses were performed and were correlated to hardness results. Corrosion resistance of the treated surface was investigated to evaluate their performance in aggressive media and chemical and medical applications. From the obtained data it can be concluded that Nd-YAG laser surface melting of aluminum results in formation of 750 micron nano-structured surface layer. Adjustment of LSM parameters could produce 100 nm grains or less. The obtained results showed also that LSM under argon can eliminate the formation of Al2O3 surface layer which may deteriorates the performance in certain applications. Surface layer rich in AlN is formed upon LSM. It was concluded also that corrosion resistance of the treated aluminum surfaces was improved to large extent by LSM.


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