4.7 Article

Effect of micro-segregation of alloying elements on the precipitation behaviour in laser surface engineered Alloy 718

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 210, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2021.116844

Keywords

Inconel 718; Additive manufacturing; Phase transformations; Micro-segregation; Laser surface engineering

Funding

  1. Center for Agile and Additive Manufacturing (CAAAM) at the University of North Texas
  2. Materials Research Facility (MRF) at the University of North Texas

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Laser surface engineering has been used to simulate microstructural evolution during laser-based additive manufacturing of Alloy 718. The micro-segregation of alloying elements in the fusion zone has a significant impact on local precipitation behavior. The dendritic structure formed by rapid melting and solidification exhibits three distinct zones and contains various types of precipitates within the austenite matrix.
Laser surface engineering has been employed to mimic the microstructural evolution during laser-based additive manufacturing of Alloy 718, specifically when the layers are successively fused and solidified. The micro-segregation of alloying elements in the fusion zone of laser surface melted Alloy 718 samples has been found to have a strong influence on the local precipitation behavior. The dendritic structure produced by rapid melting and solidification has shown three distinct zones - a) the core and b) the periphery of dendrites, and c) the inter-dendritic channel. While precipitation of gamma' [Ni-3(Al, Ti, Nb)] dominates in the core, the periphery is decorated by gamma '' [Ni-3(Nb, Mo)] and composite gamma'/gamma '' precipitates, all in the austenite(gamma) matrix. The inter-dendritic channel, rich in Nb, Mo, and C, contains discretized aggregates of Laves phase and carbides, which act as preferential nucleation sites for the equilibrium delta phase. The Nb enrichment in these channels also results in a high density of gamma '' precipitates on subsequent annealing. Microscopic examinations at different length scales using SEM, site specific TEM (both diffraction contrast and phase contrast) and Atom Probe Tomography (APT) have revealed several hitherto unknown features of precipitation processes in a compositionally inhomogeneous Alloy 718, which are invariably encountered in components produced by laser additive manufacturing. Results are rationalized in terms of quantitative elemental analyses, in nm scale, of micro-segregation of alloying elements in local regions by 3-D APT. (C) 2021 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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