| Literature DB >> 29707073 |
Chaolin Tan1,2,3, Kesong Zhou1,2, Wenyou Ma2, Bonnie Attard3, Panpan Zhang2, Tongchun Kuang1.
Abstract
Selective laser melting (SLM) additive manufacturing of pure tungsten encounters nearly all intractable difficulties of SLM metals fields due to its intrinsic properties. The key factors, including powder characteristics, layer thickness, and laser parameters of SLM high density tungsten are elucidated and discussed in detail. The main parameters were designed from theoretical calculations prior to the SLM process and experimentally optimized. Pure tungsten products with a density of 19.01 g/cm3 (98.50% theoretical density) were produced using SLM with the optimized processing parameters. A high density microstructure is formed without significant balling or macrocracks. The formation mechanisms for pores and the densification behaviors are systematically elucidated. Electron backscattered diffraction analysis confirms that the columnar grains stretch across several layers and parallel to the maximum temperature gradient, which can ensure good bonding between the layers. The mechanical properties of the SLM-produced tungsten are comparable to that produced by the conventional fabrication methods, with hardness values exceeding 460 HV0.05 and an ultimate compressive strength of about 1 GPa. This finding offers new potential applications of refractory metals in additive manufacturing.Entities:
Keywords: 10 Engineering and Structural materials; 106 Metallic materials; 210 Thermoelectronics / Thermal transport / insulators; 303 Mechanical / Physical processing; 305 Plasma / Laser processing; Additive manufacturing; densification; laser parameter; linear energy; molten pool; parameter design; property; refractory metal; selective laser melting; tungsten
Year: 2018 PMID: 29707073 PMCID: PMC5917440 DOI: 10.1080/14686996.2018.1455154
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Technol Adv Mater ISSN: 1468-6996 Impact factor: 8.090
Figure 1.SEM morphology (a) and size distribution (b) of the pure tungsten powder.
Physical parameters used for theoretical calculation in laser parameters design.
| Physical parameter | Unit | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Density/ | kg·m−3 | 19.30 × 103 |
| Specific heat/ | J (kg·K)-1 | 132 |
| Melting point/ | K | 3695 |
| Initial temperature/ | K | 323 |
| Latent heat of fusion/ | J·kg−1 | 2.20 × 105 |
| Laser absorptivity/ | – | 0.41 |
| Laser beam radius/ | mm | 50 × 10−3 |
| Laser melting radius/ | mm | 100 × 10−3 |
| Melting zone depth/H | mm | 30 × 10−3 |
Figure 2.Schematic diagram of the SLM process and the heat transfer in molten pool.
Figure 3.Optical images of SLM fabricated pure tungsten parts: (a) blocks fabricated with different linear energies; (b) 0.40 mm thin-wall tungsten part and specimens produced with η 3 = 0.667 J/mm.
Figure 4.Surface morphology and roughness taken from horizontal surfaces of SLM fabricated pure tungsten: (a) SEM image showing regular laser tracks (η 3 = 0.667 J/mm) and microcracks (inset image); (b) corresponding high-magnification SEM image showing massive nanocrystals in the liquid fronts; (c) the corresponding 3D topography image of the untreated fresh surface and (d) relationships between surface roughness and linear energy summarized from the 3D topography images.
Figure 5.Optical micrographs showing the pores in the horizontal cross-sections of pure tungsten produced by SLM with different linear energies (J/mm): (a) η 1 = 0.500, (b) η 2 = 0.625, (c) η 3 = 0.667, (d) η 4 = 0.750, (e) η 5 = 0.833, (f) η 6 = 1.000; (g) density graphs obtained from Archimedes and image analysis methods.
Figure 6.Microstructural observation and phase identification taken from horizontal cross-sections of SLM-produced pure tungsten: (a) low-magnification and (b) high-magnification OM macrographs; (c) low-magnification (inset) and high-magnification SEM morphologies, and (d) XRD patterns of powder and SLM-produced specimens.
Figure 7.SEM and EBSD analysis carried along the building direction (Z direction): (a) SEM image showing a crack along building direction and (b) Inverse pole figure showing the microstructure and grain orientation map of SLM-produced tungsten.
Figure 8.(a) The effect of laser linear energy on microhardness of SLM-processed pure tungsten and (b) compressive stress–strain curves of SLM fabricated pure tungsten with different laser linear energies.
Comparison of the mechanical properties of pure tungsten fabricated by SLM and conventional processing methods.
| Specimens | CYS (MPa) | UCS (MPa) | Strain (%) | Density (g/cm3) | HV | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SLM | 868 | 978 | 5.97 | 97.82% (18.88 ± 0.02) | 7.59 | 445 ± 39 |
| SLM | 864 | 984 | 6.58 | 98.29% (18.97 ± 0.06) | 8.10 | 448 ± 25 |
| SLM | 882 | 1015 | 6.76 | 98.50% (19.01 ± 0.02) | 6.74 | 461 ± 18 |
| SLM | 791 | 933 | 8.65 | 97.98% (18.91 ± 0.05) | 8.97 | 452 ± 31 |
| SLM | 849 | 964 | 6.64 | 97.93% (18.90 ± 0.03) | 7.46 | 467 ± 29 |
| SLM | 860 | 962 | 6.36 | 97.72% (18.86 ± 0.04) | 7.44 | 456 ± 41 |
| CVD [ | – | 780–1480 | – | ≤99.79% | – | 419 (4.5 GPa) |
| HIP [ | 1010 | 1180 | – | ≤98.00% | – | – |
| PM [ | 900 | 1000–1200 | – | ≤98.20% | – | 344 |
| SPS [ | 750 | 980 | – | ≤96.30% | – | 372 (4 GPa) |