Effect of Substrate Alloy Type on the Microstructure of the Substrate and Deposited Material Interface in Aluminium Wire plus Arc Additive Manufacturing

被引:11
作者
Eimer, Eloise [1 ]
Williams, Stewart [1 ]
Ding, Jialuo [1 ]
Ganguly, Supriyo [1 ]
Chehab, Bechir [2 ]
机构
[1] Cranfield Univ, Welding Engn & Laser Proc Ctr, Sch Aerosp, Transport & Mfg, Coll Rd, Cranfield MK43 0AL, Beds, England
[2] Constellium Technol Ctr, 725 Rue Aristide Berges, F-38341 Voreppe, France
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
additive manufacturing; aluminum; direct energy deposition; Wire plus Arc additive manufacturing; POSTDEPOSITION HEAT-TREATMENT; PARTIALLY MELTED ZONE; LAYER COLD-WORKING; MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES; WELD COMPOSITION; POROSITY; CRACK;
D O I
10.3390/met11060916
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
Wire + Arc Additive Manufacture is an Additive Manufacturing process that requires a substrate to initiate the deposition process. In order to reduce material waste, build and lead time, and improve process efficiency, it is desirable to include this substrate in the final part design. This approach is a valid option only if the interface between the substrate and the deposited metal properties conform to the design specifications. The effect of substrate type on the interface microstructure in an aluminium part was investigated. Microstructure and micro-hardness measurements show the effect of substrate alloy and temper on the interface between the substrate and deposited material. Microcracks in the as-deposited condition were only found in one substrate. The deposited material hardness is always lower than the substrate hardness. However, this difference can be minimised by heat treatment and even eliminated when the substrate and wire are made of the same alloy. Dataset License: CC0
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 35 条
  • [1] High Power Laser Beam Melting of Ti6 Al4 V on Formed Sheet Metal to achieve Hybrid structures
    Ahuja, Bhrigu
    Schaub, Adam
    Karg, Michael
    Schmidt, Roman
    Merklein, Marion
    Schmidt, Michael
    [J]. LASER 3D MANUFACTURING II, 2015, 9353
  • [2] Ayarkwa K. F., 2015, International Journal of Rapid Manufacturing, V5, P44
  • [3] Mechanical properties of 2219-Al components produced by additive manufacturing with TIG
    Bai, J. Y.
    Yang, C. L.
    Lin, S. B.
    Dong, B. L.
    Fan, C. L.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY, 2016, 86 (1-4) : 479 - 485
  • [4] Precipitation behavior of aluminum alloy 2139 fabricated using additive manufacturing
    Brice, Craig
    Shenoy, Ravi
    Kral, Milo
    Buchannan, Karl
    [J]. MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING A-STRUCTURAL MATERIALS PROPERTIES MICROSTRUCTURE AND PROCESSING, 2015, 648 : 9 - 14
  • [5] Effect of compositional changes on microstructure in additively manufactured aluminum alloy 2139
    Brice, Craig A.
    Tayon, Wesley A.
    Newman, John A.
    Kral, Milo V.
    Bishop, Catherine
    Sokolova, Anna
    [J]. MATERIALS CHARACTERIZATION, 2018, 143 : 50 - 58
  • [6] A Comparative Study of Additively Manufactured Thin Wall and Block Structure with Al-6.3%Cu Alloy Using Cold Metal Transfer Process
    Cong, Baoqiang
    Qi, Zewu
    Qi, Bojin
    Sun, Hongye
    Zhao, Gang
    Ding, Jialuo
    [J]. APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL, 2017, 7 (03):
  • [7] Effect of arc mode in cold metal transfer process on porosity of additively manufactured Al-6.3% Cu alloy
    Cong, Baoqiang
    Ding, Jialuo
    Williams, Stewart
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 76 (9-12) : 1593 - 1606
  • [8] Davis J.R., 1998, METALS HDB DESK EDIT, Vsecond, P1032
  • [9] Dumolt S.D., P 1 INT AL WELD C CL, P115
  • [10] Eswara PrasadN., 2014, ALUMINUM LITHIUM ALL, V1st