4.8 Article

Control of thermally stable core-shell nano-precipitates in additively manufactured Al-Sc-Zr alloys

Journal

ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING
Volume 32, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.addma.2019.100910

Keywords

Laser additive manufacturing (LAM); Directed energy deposition (DED); Intrinsic heat treatment (IHT); Atom probe tomography (APT); Core-shell nano-precipitates; Al-Sc alloys

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Laser Additive Manufacturing (LAM) of light metals such as high-strength Al-based alloys offers tremendous potential for e.g. weight reduction and associated reduced fuel consumptions for the transportation industry. Typically, commercial Sc-containing alloys, such as Scalmalloy (R), rely on precipitation hardening to increase their strength. Conventional processing involves controlled ageing during which ordered and coherent Al3Sc precipitates form from a Sc-supersaturated solid solution. Here we show how the intrinsic heat treatment (IHT) of directed energy deposition (DED) can be used to trigger the precipitation of Al3Sc already during the LAM process. High number densities of 10(23) nano-precipitates per m(3) can be realized through solid-state phase transformation from the supersaturated Al-Sc matrix that results from the fast cooling rate in LAM. Yet, the IHT causes precipitates to coarsen, hence reducing their strengthening effect. We implement alternative solidification conditions to exploit the IHT to form a Zr-rich shell around the Al3Sc precipitates that prevents coarsening. Our approach is applicable to a wide range of precipitation-hardened alloys to trigger in-situ precipitation during LAM.

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