4.7 Article

Friction stir powder additive manufacturing of Al 6061 alloy: Enhancing microstructure and mechanical properties by reducing thermal gradient

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY-JMR&T
Volume 26, Issue -, Pages 1168-1184

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmrt.2023.07.270

Keywords

Friction stir powder additive; manufacturing; Al 6061 alloy; Thermal gradient; Dynamic recrystallization; In-situ substrate temperature; monitoring

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This paper focuses on the solid state multi-layer manufacturing of Al 6061 alloy by friction stir powder additive manufacturing (FSPAM) process and how it enhances the microstructure and mechanical properties of the alloy. The study shows that continuous dynamic recrystallization and reduced thermal gradient contribute to a homogeneous microstructure with fine grains, as well as lower porosity and the presence of compressive residual stresses.
Additive manufacturing of Al alloys by fusion-based processes often leads to higher thermal gradients along the build direction resulting in anisotropy, and solidification-related defects such as porosity, hot-cracking, and lack of inter and intra-layer fusion. Therefore, this paper focuses on solid state multi-layer manufacturing of Al 6061 alloy by friction stir powder additive manufacturing (FSPAM) process and enhancing its micro-structure and mechanical properties through reduction of thermal gradient along the build direction by maintaining the substrate close to its artificial aging temperature using external heat source in a close-loop with it. The continuous dynamic recrystallization along with reduced thermal gradient led to homogenous microstructure, fine and equiaxed grains of Al 6061 alloy multi-layer deposition. The inherent compressive forces in FSPAM process promoted intimate contact among the powder particles presenting 0.19% porosity. Energy dispersive spectroscopy showed absence of agglomeration of alloying elements due to better mixing of feedstock material beneath the tool. Phase analysis revealed presence of Al and hardening phase Mg2Si with slight shifting of peaks towards higher angle indicating compressive residual stresses. Tensile properties and microhardness of Al 6061 alloy are closer to AA6061-T4 and better than AA6061-O alloy. Reduced thermal gradient contributed to minimal variations in microhardness (8.8%) along the build direction. Fracture morphology analysis exhibited a significant number of dimples indicating ductile nature of Al 6061 alloy with 16.7% elongation. The study presented a new approach for manufacturing Al alloys using their feedstock in powder form and with improved micro-structure and mechanical properties.& COPY; 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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