Thermodynamics-guided alloy and process design for additive manufacturing

Page view(s)
91
Checked on Sep 07, 2025
Thermodynamics-guided alloy and process design for additive manufacturing
Title:
Thermodynamics-guided alloy and process design for additive manufacturing
Journal Title:
Nature Communications
Publication Date:
27 July 2022
Citation:
Sun, Z., Ma, Y., Ponge, D., Zaefferer, S., Jägle, E. A., Gault, B., Rollett, A. D., & Raabe, D. (2022). Thermodynamics-guided alloy and process design for additive manufacturing. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-31969-y
Abstract:
In conventional processing, metals go through multiple manufacturing steps including casting, plastic deformation, and heat treatment to achieve the desired property. In additive manufacturing (AM) the same target must be reached in one fabrication process, involving solidification and cyclic remelting. The thermodynamic and kinetic differences between the solid and liquid phases lead to constitutional undercooling, local variations in the solidification interval, and unexpected precipitation of secondary phases. These features may cause many undesired defects, one of which is the so-called hot cracking. The response of the thermodynamic and kinetic nature of these phenomena to high cooling rates provides access to the knowledge-based and tailored design of alloys for AM. Here, we illustrate such an approach by solving the hot cracking problem, using the commercially important IN738LC superalloy as a model material. The same approach could also be applied to adapt other hot-cracking susceptible alloy systems for AM.
License type:
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Funding Info:
acknowledge funding from German Ministry of Education and Research under the “Danish” project with grant number 03XP02154.
Description:
ISSN:
2041-1723
Files uploaded:

File Size Format Action
s41467-022-31969-y.pdf 4.44 MB PDF Open