4.7 Article

Evaluation of post-treatments of novel hot-work tool steel manufactured by laser powder bed fusion for aluminum die casting applications

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2020.140305

Keywords

Laser powder bed fusion; Hot-work tool steels; Heat treatment; Nitriding; Die casting; Thermal fatigue

Funding

  1. Swedish Agency for Economic and Regional Growth [20201144]
  2. ATLAB -additive manufacturing laboratory at Karlstad University
  3. Region Varmland
  4. RISE IVF AB
  5. Additive Manufacturing Research Laboratory (AMRL) at RISE IVF

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This research examined the performance of a novel hot-work tool steel for aluminum die casting applications manufactured by laser powder bed fusion, finding that appropriate heat treatment and hot isostatic pressing significantly improved material hardness and toughness, while nitriding treatment may reduce impact toughness.
Additive manufacturing is a good alternative to conventional methods for the production of near net shape geometries with high geometric complexity shorter lead times, being a good option for the manufacturing of dies for die casting process. In this research, a novel hot-work tool steel for aluminum die casting applications manufactured by laser powder bed fusion was investigated. As-built and stress-relieved (AS-B + SR) state was established and used as the reference condition, and subsequent post-treatments were added and compared to the reference condition. Test parts were evaluated using tensile, impact, hardness and thermal fatigue testing. Compared to the reference condition, heat treatment (HT), significantly increased the hardness, yield and ultimate tensile strengths of the material, due to the obtained tempered martensite microstructure. Hot isostatic pressing (HIP) prior to HT significantly increased the impact toughness and ductility, and slightly increased the yield and ultimate tensile strength values compared to the HT condition. The addition of nitriding treatment after HT, without intermedium HIP step, resulted in the highest surface hardness and lowest impact toughness. Thermal fatigue was mostly affected by the hardness and the softening of the material during the thermal fatigue testing. Results showed that a high surface hardness resulted in a higher thermal fatigue crack nucleation, meanwhile conditions with a high softening during thermal fatigue performance resulted in a higher crack propagation.

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