4.6 Article

Synchrotron Characterisation of Ultra-Fine Grain TiB2/Al-Cu Composite Fabricated by Laser Powder Bed Fusion

Journal

ACTA METALLURGICA SINICA-ENGLISH LETTERS
Volume 35, Issue 1, Pages 78-92

Publisher

CHINESE ACAD SCIENCES, INST METAL RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1007/s40195-021-01317-y

Keywords

Aluminium metal matrix composite; Laser powder bed fusion; Heterogeneous nucleation; Synchrotron characterisation

Funding

  1. Royal Society [IEC\NSFC\191319, RGS\R2\202122]

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This study successfully fabricated a high-strength TiB2/Al-Cu composite with random texture using LPBF. Characterization techniques revealed ultra-fine grains with an average size of about 0.86 μm, and a yield strength and total elongation of 317 MPa and 10%, respectively. In situ synchrotron techniques were used to investigate defects and lattice strain evolution during tensile loading, contributing to the development of crystal-plasticity models.
Isotropy in microstructure and mechanical properties remains a challenge for laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) processed materials due to the epitaxial growth and rapid cooling in LPBF. In this study, a high-strength TiB2/Al-Cu composite with random texture was successfully fabricated by laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) using pre-doped TiB2/Al-Cu composite powder. A series of advanced characterisation techniques, including synchrotron X-ray tomography, correlative focussed ion beam-scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM), scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM), and synchrotron in situ X-ray diffraction, were applied to investigate the defects and microstructure of the as-fabricated TiB2/Al-Cu composite across multiple length scales. The study showed ultra-fine grains with an average grain size of about 0.86 mu m, and a random texture was formed in the as-fabricated condition due to rapid solidification and the TiB2 particles promoting heterogeneous nucleation. The yield strength and total elongation of the as-fabricated composite were 317 MPa and 10%, respectively. The contributions of fine grains, solid solutions, dislocations, particles, and Guinier-Preston (GP) zones were calculated. Failure was found to be initiated from the largest lack-of-fusion pore, as revealed by in situ synchrotron tomography during tensile loading. In situ synchrotron diffraction was used to characterise the lattice strain evolution during tensile loading, providing important data for the development of crystal-plasticity models.

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