Abstract
Additive manufacturing of directionally solidified Ni-based superalloys faces at least two critical obstacles, namely, the formation of stray equiaxed grains and the susceptibility to cracking; circumventing both of these simultaneously is considered difficult. In this study, a comparative study of a non-weldable superalloy IN738 fabricated through the laser directed energy deposition (DED) without preheating the base plate and the electron beam powder bed fusion (EB-PBF) with preheating up to the upper bound of ductility dip temperature range was performed. With appropriate process parameters, a steep and unidirectional temperature gradient, a sufficiently high cooling rate at the liquid/solid interface, and a relatively low cooling rate at the γ′ solvus are obtained simultaneously in the EB-PBF process. The prevalence of these conditions results in the growth of well-aligned columnar dendrites, mitigates the elemental segregation, reduces the built-in microscopic defects, and lowers the stored deformation energy. Consequently, cracking is successfully prevented and reasonable room temperature tensile properties are achieved in the as-printed EB-PBF product. Moreover, recrystallization is not triggered during the post-printing heat treatment, and thus the <001> fiber texture is preserved. This study provides a detailed understanding of the critical factors that need to overcome for producing directionally solidified superalloys through additive manufacturing.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 103095 |
| Journal | Additive Manufacturing |
| Volume | 59 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Nov 2022 |
Keywords
- Columnar dendrite growth
- Cracking prevention
- Directionally solidified Ni-based superalloys
- Electron beam powder bed fusion
- Laser directed energy deposition
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