4.6 Article

Advancement of extreme environment additively manufactured alloys for next generation space propulsion applications

Journal

ACTA ASTRONAUTICA
Volume 211, Issue -, Pages 483-497

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actaastro.2023.06.035

Keywords

Additive manufacturing; Propulsion; Rockets; Alloy development; GRCop-42; GRCop-84; Refractory; GRX-810; L-PBF; LP-DED; DED; Laser powder bed fusion; Laser powder directed energy deposition; NASA HR-1

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NASA has been working on the development of metal additive manufacturing (AM) for space applications since the late 2000's. They have focused on understanding the AM processes, developing standards, fabricating components, and integrating them into propulsion development and flight applications. NASA has successfully matured commonly used aerospace alloys through detailed AM process characterization and testing. They are also working on developing optimized alloys using integrated computational materials engineering (ICME) for high-performance applications.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has been involved in the development and maturation of metal additive manufacturing (AM) for space applications since the late 2000's. Several efforts have focused on the understanding of AM processes through material characterization and testing, standards development, component fabrication, and infusion into propulsion development and flight applications. NASA matured commonly used aerospace alloys from various alloy families (Nickel, Copper, Stainless and Steel, Aluminum, and Titanium-based) through detailed AM process and heat treatment characterization, in addition to mechanical and thermophysical testing. While these alloys are actively used in many propulsion applications, there is a need for ongoing AM optimized alloys using integrated computational materials engineering (ICME) and process development for high performance applications. The applications targeted are liquid rocket engines; advanced propulsion systems; and in-space propulsion with high heat fluxes, high pressure, and/or that use propellants that can degrade alloys (e.g., hydrogen). This paper highlights the characterization and physical properties of the more common AM alloys using laser powder bed fusion (L-PBF) and laser powder directed energy deposition (LP-DED) processes. Additionally, this paper discusses some of the ongoing novel alloy development and maturation using AM for use in these harsh environments, such as GRCop-42, GRCop-84, NASA HR-1, GRX-810, and C-103. The results from these processes demonstrated that AM could enable rapid development, and that optimized alloys could be developed using ICME, yielding higher performances. These alloys have undergone modeling, fundamental metallurgical evaluations, heat treatment studies, detailed microstructure characterization, and mechanical testing campaigns. This, combined with direct application-specific component fabrication and hot-fire testing, enabled the increase of the Technology Readiness Level (TRL) through high duty-cycle testing. A background and overview of these novel AM-enabled alloys and AM processing developments including metallurgical and mechanical property studies is presented here. The latest advancement in the parallel component development and hot-fire testing and future developments for these alloys is also discussed.

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