Centre for Additive Manufacturing, School of Engineering, RMIT University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Manufacturing, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
Nature. 2019 Dec;576(7785):91-95. doi: 10.1038/s41586-019-1783-1. Epub 2019 Dec 4.
Additive manufacturing, often known as three-dimensional (3D) printing, is a process in which a part is built layer-by-layer and is a promising approach for creating components close to their final (net) shape. This process is challenging the dominance of conventional manufacturing processes for products with high complexity and low material waste. Titanium alloys made by additive manufacturing have been used in applications in various industries. However, the intrinsic high cooling rates and high thermal gradient of the fusion-based metal additive manufacturing process often leads to a very fine microstructure and a tendency towards almost exclusively columnar grains, particularly in titanium-based alloys. (Columnar grains in additively manufactured titanium components can result in anisotropic mechanical properties and are therefore undesirable.) Attempts to optimize the processing parameters of additive manufacturing have shown that it is difficult to alter the conditions to promote equiaxed growth of titanium grains. In contrast with other common engineering alloys such as aluminium, there is no commercial grain refiner for titanium that is able to effectively refine the microstructure. To address this challenge, here we report on the development of titanium-copper alloys that have a high constitutional supercooling capacity as a result of partitioning of the alloying element during solidification, which can override the negative effect of a high thermal gradient in the laser-melted region during additive manufacturing. Without any special process control or additional treatment, our as-printed titanium-copper alloy specimens have a fully equiaxed fine-grained microstructure. They also display promising mechanical properties, such as high yield strength and uniform elongation, compared to conventional alloys under similar processing conditions, owing to the formation of an ultrafine eutectoid microstructure that appears as a result of exploiting the high cooling rates and multiple thermal cycles of the manufacturing process. We anticipate that this approach will be applicable to other eutectoid-forming alloy systems, and that it will have applications in the aerospace and biomedical industries.
增材制造,通常被称为三维(3D)打印,是一种逐层构建零件的方法,是制造接近最终(净)形状的组件的有前途的方法。 该过程正在挑战具有高复杂性和低材料浪费的产品的传统制造工艺的主导地位。 通过增材制造制造的钛合金已在各个行业的应用中使用。 然而,基于熔合的金属增材制造工艺的固有高冷却速率和高热梯度通常导致非常细的微观结构和几乎仅柱状晶粒的趋势,特别是在钛基合金中。 (增材制造的钛组件中的柱状晶粒会导致各向异性机械性能,因此是不理想的。)优化增材制造加工参数的尝试表明,很难改变条件以促进钛晶粒的等轴生长。 与其他常见的工程合金(如铝)不同,没有商业晶粒细化剂可用于有效地细化钛的微观结构。 为了解决这一挑战,我们在这里报告开发钛铜合金,由于凝固过程中合金元素的偏析,该合金具有高的固有过冷能力,这可以克服增材制造过程中激光熔化区域高热梯度的负面影响。 在没有任何特殊工艺控制或额外处理的情况下,我们打印的钛铜合金样品具有完全等轴细晶粒微观结构。 与类似加工条件下的传统合金相比,它们还表现出有希望的机械性能,例如屈服强度高和均匀伸长率高,这是由于利用制造工艺的高冷却速率和多个热循环形成超细化共析微观结构的结果。 我们预计这种方法将适用于其他共析形成的合金系统,并将在航空航天和生物医学工业中有应用。