As 3D printing in metal continues to lead the next industrial revolution, engineers from Australia are taking research one step further in examining improved methods for improving mechanical properties. Choosing a titanium alloy to create samples for experimentation and testing, the authors outlined their findings in the recently published ‘Grain structure control during metal 3D printing by high-intensity ultrasound.’
Samples consisted of 10 mm × 10 mm × 10 mm cubes for microstructural examination and 24 mm × 8 mm × 10 mm (length, width, and height) blocks for tensile testing. Without transforming the alloy at all, the researchers employ an additive manufacturing solidification-control solution to print metallic alloys with equiaxed grain structures, to prevent property anisotropy and the consequent decrease in mechanical performance. In this study, titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V is used.
Reigning as the ‘benchmark alloy’ of titanium, and the subject of many studies, titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V is used as a comparison for quality in metal AM processes.
“However, Ti-6Al-4V fabricated by different fusion-based AM processes exhibits a strong columnar grain structure. The columnar prior-β grains in AM-fabricated Ti-6Al-4V feature the strong <001> orientation along the build direction. This gives rise to a β → α transformation texture, which is an important concern for AM qualification because of the resulting anisotropy of mechanical properties,” explain the researchers.
“In addition, the coarse columnar prior-β grains may further degrade the strength of Ti-6Al-4V according to the Hall–Petch relationship established for lamellar α–β Ti-6Al-4V21–23 (exceptions can exist).”
While it can be difficult in metal 3D printing to find a strong and stable nucleant alloy, Ti-6Al-4V is exactly that.
Samples were prepared using Ti-6Al-4V both with and without high-intensity ultrasound. The resulting microstructural analysis showed significant differences between the samples, as those without ultrasound displayed columnar prior-β grains of several millimeters in length and ~0.5 mm in width traversing multiple deposited layers (as the researchers anticipated), while the samples used with ultrasound indicated fine (~100 µm), equiaxed prior-β grains. After scanning all the samples with scanning electron microscopy (SEM), the researchers noted a basketweave-like α–β microstructure inside the prior-β grains.
Ultimately, the study showed that the use of ultrasound during the AM process with Ti-6Al-4V allows a fully equiaxed structure to form, resulting in:
- Improvement in microstructural homogeneity
- Significant reduction in the prior-β grain size
- Substantial weakening of the solidification texture
“Assessment of the ultrasonic conditions reveals that the selection of the ultrasound transducer element can be an important practical consideration for structural refinement of large-volume AM-fabricated parts and the use of a magnetostrictive transducer is recommended,” concluded the researchers.
“To assess the generality of our approach, the ultrasonic grain refinement method is successfully applied to the AM of Inconel 625, including the creation of an alternating columnar/equiaxed/ columnar Inconel 625 grain structure along the build height by simply switching on and off the ultrasound during AM. We expect that this technique can be extended to the AM of other metallic materials.”
As metal 3D printing grows in popularity–and industrial users begin to rely more on AM processes, researchers are studying titanium powder as it shows potential for so many applications; for instance, in the fabrication of medical implants in critical surgeries, assistance in bone regeneration, and more.
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