4.7 Article

Investigation of porosity, texture, and deformation behavior using high energy X-rays during in-situ tensile loading in additively manufactured 316L stainless steel

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2021.141034

Keywords

Additive manufacturing; Damage evolution; X-ray computed tomography; Synchrotron diffraction; Tensile loading; 316L Stainless steel

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research [N0001420WX00405]
  2. National Science Foundation [DMR1829070]

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The study investigated the evolution of damage, texture, and strain in additive manufactured 316L stainless steel during in-situ tensile loading using high energy X-rays. It was found that the inhomogeneous distribution of porosity near the surface played a significant role in damage evolution, leading to reduced ductility and final failure in thin-walled AM samples.
The evolution of damage, texture, and strain in additive manufactured (AM) 316L stainless steel produced via laser powder bed fusion was investigated during in-situ tensile loading using high energy X-rays. Synchrotron Xray computed tomography (XCT) measurements were performed to determine the initial porosity and monitor the evolution of porosity during tensile loading as well as detect the initiation and growth of voids from preexisting pore defects in the specimens. The as-built tensile specimens had a cross-sectional area of 1 mm2, which was chosen in order to understand damage behavior in thin-walled structures. Far-field X-ray diffraction measurements were performed to quantify crystallographic texture and the distribution of internal elastic strains during loading. The initial texture from the AM build process had a weak {220} texture aligned parallel to the build direction. As a result of tensile deformation, a strong {111} + {200} double fiber texture develops at high tensile strains and remains until fracture. XCT results confirmed that the inhomogeneous distribution of porosity near the surface played a significant role in damage evolution during tensile loading where voids and cracks initiated at pre-existing pores located within the contour zone. These pores were found to have asymmetric or irregular morphology. At high tensile strains, the massive accumulation of internal damage at these pores eventually connected to the surface reducing the ductility in these thin-walled AM samples and resulting in final failure.

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