3 research outputs found

    Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of a Combination Interface between Direct Energy Deposition and Selective Laser Melted Al-Mg-Sc-Zr Alloy

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    Selective laser melting (SLM) and direct energy deposition (DED) are two widely used technologies in additive manufacturing (AM). However, there are few studies on the combination of the two technologies, which can synthetically combine the advantages of the two technologies for more flexible material design. This paper systematically studies the Al-Mg-Sc-Zr alloy by combination of SLM and DED with emphasis on its bonding properties, microstructure, and metallurgical defects. It is found that the aluminum alloy prepared by the two methods achieves a good metallurgical combination. The microstructure of aluminum alloy prepared by DED is composed of equiaxed crystals, and there are a large number of Al3(Sc, Zr) precipitated phase particles rich in Sc and Zr. The microstructure of SLM aluminum alloy is composed of equiaxed crystals and columnar crystals, and there is a fine-grained area at the boundary of the molten pool. With the decrease of laser volumetric energy density (VED), the width and depth of the molten pool at the interface junction gradually decrease. The porosity gradually increases with the decrease of VED, and the microhardness shows a downward trend. Tensile strength and elongation at fracture of the SLM printed sample at 133.3 J/mm3 are about 400 MPa and 9.4%, while the direct energy depositioned sample are about 280 MPa and 5.9%. Due to the excellent bonding performance, this research has certain guiding significance for SLM–DED composite aluminum alloy

    Unconventional precipitation and martensitic transformation behaviour of Ni-rich NiTi alloy fabricated via laser-directed energy deposition

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    In this study, we report an unconventional precipitation and martensitic transformation behaviour of directly aged Ni-rich NiTi alloys fabricated via laser-directed energy deposition (LDED). Ni4Ti3 particles precipitate uniformly under all ageing conditions and no traditional multiple-step martensitic transformations are observed. We conclude this unique behaviour to the intrinsic characteristics of the LDED technique, which are metastable microstructures and high residual stresses. On the one hand, these features make grain boundaries no longer a fevered location for precipitation and, on the other hand, significantly suppress the martensitic transformation when ageing at low temperatures (300°C/400°C). As the aging temperature increase (500°C), residual stresses release significantly, accompanied by the growth of Ni4Ti3 precipitates from several nanometres to 452 ± 181 nm with increased interparticle spacing. At the same time, reverse martensitic transformations change from two-step (B19′ → R → B2) to single-step (B19′ → B2)
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