Alumina Reinforced EP648 Metal Matrix Composite Produced by Selective Laser Melting Powder Bed Fusion Additive Technology

2021 ◽  
Vol 316 ◽  
pp. 181-186
Author(s):  
P.A. Lykov ◽  
L. V. Radionova

This paper is devoted to fabrication of alumina reinforced EP648 matrix composite material, using selective laser melting. of two-phase composite powder, prepared by ball milling of metal and ceramic powders. Five 10x10x5 mm bulk specimens were successfully manufactured using different process parameters. The obtained MMC specimens were characterized by scanning electron microscopy.

2017 ◽  
Vol 265 ◽  
pp. 481-485
Author(s):  
P.A. Lykov ◽  
D.A. Zherebtsov ◽  
S.V. Nerush

The development of additive manufacturing (SLS/SLM, EBM, DMD) suggests the increase of the range expansion of materials used. One of the most promising directions is products manufacturing from composite materials. The technology of composite micro-powders production on the basis of heat-resistant nickel alloy EP648 and TiC is proposed. The aim of this research is to develop a method of producing composite micropowders for additive technology application. This method is based on modification of the metal micropowders surface by the second phase in a planetary mixer (mechanochemical synthesis).The obtained composite micropowders are compared with powders which are recommended for selective laser melting usage (produced by MTT Technology). The equipment used in the research: planetary mixer, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), optical granulomorphometer Occio 500nano.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Golyshev ◽  
Alexander Malikov ◽  
Anatoliy Orishich ◽  
Mikhail Gulov ◽  
Alexei Ancharov

Abstract A metal-matrix composite based on Ti-6Al-4V – B4C with TiB, TiB2 and TiC inclusions was successfully obtained as a result of in-situ synthesis using repetitively pulsed laser radiation. For the first time, the phase composition of the obtained metal-matrix composite was studied using synchrotron radiation. A comparison of the effect of using continuous and pulsed-periodic radiation in selective laser melting on the microstructure and mechanical properties of coatings was made. The use of repetitively pulsed radiation made it possible to form more uniform structures and to improve the mechanical properties of metal-matrix coatings in comparison with the continuous mode of exposure. It has been established that the use of repetitively pulsed radiation and the formation of TiB2, TiB, TiC phases made it possible to increase the wear resistance of the formed composite by a factor of 6 in comparison with the Ti-6Al-4V metal coating.


2019 ◽  
Vol 946 ◽  
pp. 966-971
Author(s):  
R.M. Baitimerov ◽  
A.B. Liberzon ◽  
V.I. Mitin

Selective laser melting (SLM) technology makes it possible to produce complex shape metallic and metal-matrix composite (MMC) bulk parts from powder feedstock. This paper is devoted to selective laser melting of mechanically mixed metal (gas atomized EP648 alloy) and ceramic (alumina) powders. Four 10x10x5 mm specimen were successfully manufactured using different process parameters. Obtained MMC specimen were characterized by scanning electron microscopy. A possibility of manufacturing of dense EP648-alumina MMC by SLM using two-component mixed powder was shown


Author(s):  
Jonas Nitzler ◽  
Christoph Meier ◽  
Kei W. Müller ◽  
Wolfgang A. Wall ◽  
N. E. Hodge

AbstractThe elasto-plastic material behavior, material strength and failure modes of metals fabricated by additive manufacturing technologies are significantly determined by the underlying process-specific microstructure evolution. In this work a novel physics-based and data-supported phenomenological microstructure model for Ti-6Al-4V is proposed that is suitable for the part-scale simulation of laser powder bed fusion processes. The model predicts spatially homogenized phase fractions of the most relevant microstructural species, namely the stable $$\beta $$ β -phase, the stable $$\alpha _{\text {s}}$$ α s -phase as well as the metastable Martensite $$\alpha _{\text {m}}$$ α m -phase, in a physically consistent manner. In particular, the modeled microstructure evolution, in form of diffusion-based and non-diffusional transformations, is a pure consequence of energy and mobility competitions among the different species, without the need for heuristic transformation criteria as often applied in existing models. The mathematically consistent formulation of the evolution equations in rate form renders the model suitable for the practically relevant scenario of temperature- or time-dependent diffusion coefficients, arbitrary temperature profiles, and multiple coexisting phases. Due to its physically motivated foundation, the proposed model requires only a minimal number of free parameters, which are determined in an inverse identification process considering a broad experimental data basis in form of time-temperature transformation diagrams. Subsequently, the predictive ability of the model is demonstrated by means of continuous cooling transformation diagrams, showing that experimentally observed characteristics such as critical cooling rates emerge naturally from the proposed microstructure model, instead of being enforced as heuristic transformation criteria. Eventually, the proposed model is exploited to predict the microstructure evolution for a realistic selective laser melting application scenario and for the cooling/quenching process of a Ti-6Al-4V cube of practically relevant size. Numerical results confirm experimental observations that Martensite is the dominating microstructure species in regimes of high cooling rates, e.g., due to highly localized heat sources or in near-surface domains, while a proper manipulation of the temperature field, e.g., by preheating the base-plate in selective laser melting, can suppress the formation of this metastable phase.


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