18 research outputs found

    The effects of powder reuse on the mechanical response of electron beam additively manufactured Ti6Al4V parts

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    High cost of metal powders has increased the demand for recycling of unmelted powder in electron beam powder bed fusion additive manufacturing process. However, powder characteristics are likely to change during manufacturing, recovery and reuse. It is important to track the evolution of powder characteristics at different stages of recycling to produce components with consistent properties. The present work evaluates the changes in Ti6Al4V powder properties during manufacturing by characterising powder particles at different locations in the powder bed; recovery and reuse, through evaluating the effects of the powder recovery system and sieving for 10 build cycles. Heterogeneous powder degradation occurred during manufacturing with the particles closer to the melt zone showing higher oxygen content and thicker α laths with β phase boundaries. Most of them had a hard-sintered and agglomerated powder morphology in contrast to particles at the edges of the powder bed. Recovery and reuse resulted in a refined particle size distribution, but only marginal change in powder morphology. The increased oxygen caused a slight increase in the yield and tensile strengths of the build. The effect of powder reuse on material elongation, hardness and Charpy impact energy was negligible. The high cycle fatigue performance deteriorated with reuse due to the increased lack-of-fusion defects. This might be attributed to the voids formed in the powder bed due to decrease in the number of fine particles coupled with an increase in the number of high-aspect ratio particles

    In situ monitoring the effects of Ti6Al4V powder oxidation during laser powder bed fusion additive manufacturing

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    Making laser powder bed fusion (L-PBF) additive manufacturing process sustainable requires effective powder recycling. Recycling of Ti6Al4V powder in L-PBF can lead to powder oxidation, however, such impact on laser-matter interactions, process, and defect dynamics during L-PBF are not well understood. This study reveals and quantifies the effects of processing Ti6Al4V powders with low (0.12 wt%) and high (0.40 wt%) oxygen content during multilayer thin-wall L-PBF using in situ high speed synchrotron X-ray imaging. Our results reveal that high oxygen content Ti6Al4V powder can reduce melt ejections, surface roughness, and defect population in the built parts. With increasing oxygen content in the part, there is an increase in microhardness due to solid solution strengthening and no significant change in the microstructure is evident
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