Simulation of solidified β grain for Ti-6Al-4V during wire laser additive manufacturing by three-dimensional Cellular Automaton method

Author(s):  
Weizhao Sun ◽  
Feihu Shan ◽  
Nanfu Zong ◽  
Hongbiao Dong ◽  
Tao Jing
3D Printing ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 154-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rasheedat M. Mahamood ◽  
Esther T. Akinlabi

Laser additive manufacturing is an advanced manufacturing process for making prototypes as well as functional parts directly from the three dimensional (3D) Computer-Aided Design (CAD) model of the part and the parts are built up adding materials layer after layer, until the part is competed. Of all the additive manufacturing process, laser additive manufacturing is more favoured because of the advantages that laser offers. Laser is characterized by collimated linear beam that can be accurately controlled. This chapter brings to light, the various laser additive manufacturing technologies such as: - selective laser sintering and melting, stereolithography and laser metal deposition. Each of these laser additive manufacturing technologies are described with their merits and demerits as well as their areas of applications. Properties of some of the parts produced through these processes are also reviewed in this chapter.


2018 ◽  
Vol 61 (5) ◽  
pp. 543-558 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanping Lian ◽  
Stephen Lin ◽  
Wentao Yan ◽  
Wing Kam Liu ◽  
Gregory J. Wagner

2012 ◽  
Vol 729 ◽  
pp. 150-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Szilvia Gyöngyösi ◽  
Péter Barkóczy

By applying the cellular automaton method the short-range diffusion processes in metals can be efficiently simulated. Several examples for the two-and three dimensional modeling of recrystallization and grain-coarsening are know at the literature. In some previous works, results have been performed concerning the two-dimensional, stochastic automatons of grain-coarsening, recrystallization and allotropic transformation. In order to use these simulations also in technological processes, it is necessary to scale the results reached by the simulation. The primary aspect of adapting the automaton in technological processes is the quick-operating simulation. The aim is to develop a most simplified, scalable cellular automaton by which scaling can be efficiently performed.


Author(s):  
Rasheedat Modupe Mahamood ◽  
Esther Titilayo Akinlabi

Laser additive manufacturing is an advanced manufacturing process for making prototypes as well as functional parts directly from the three dimensional (3D) Computer-Aided Design (CAD) model of the part and the parts are built up adding materials layer after layer, until the part is competed. Of all the additive manufacturing process, laser additive manufacturing is more favoured because of the advantages that laser offers. Laser is characterized by collimated linear beam that can be accurately controlled. This chapter brings to light, the various laser additive manufacturing technologies such as: - selective laser sintering and melting, stereolithography and laser metal deposition. Each of these laser additive manufacturing technologies are described with their merits and demerits as well as their areas of applications. Properties of some of the parts produced through these processes are also reviewed in this chapter.


2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 741-757
Author(s):  
Kateryna Hazdiuk ◽  
◽  
Volodymyr Zhikharevich ◽  
Serhiy Ostapov ◽  
◽  
...  

This paper deals with the issue of model construction of the self-regeneration and self-replication processes using movable cellular automata (MCAs). The rules of cellular automaton (CA) interactions are found according to the concept of equilibrium neighborhood. The method is implemented by establishing these rules between different types of cellular automata (CAs). Several models for two- and three-dimensional cases are described, which depict both stable and unstable structures. As a result, computer models imitating such natural phenomena as self-replication and self-regeneration are obtained and graphically presented.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Yang ◽  
Lu Wang ◽  
Wentao Yan

AbstractA three-dimensional phase-field model is developed to simulate grain evolutions during powder-bed-fusion (PBF) additive manufacturing, while the physically-informed temperature profile is implemented from a thermal-fluid flow model. The phase-field model incorporates a nucleation model based on classical nucleation theory, as well as the initial grain structures of powder particles and substrate. The grain evolutions during the three-layer three-track PBF process are comprehensively reproduced, including grain nucleation and growth in molten pools, epitaxial growth from powder particles, substrate and previous tracks, grain re-melting and re-growth in overlapping zones, and grain coarsening in heat-affected zones. A validation experiment has been carried out, showing that the simulation results are consistent with the experimental results in the molten pool and grain morphologies. Furthermore, the grain refinement by adding nanoparticles is preliminarily reproduced and compared against the experimental result in literature.


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