4.7 Article

Microstructure and yield strength of SLM-fabricated CM247LC Ni-Superalloy

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 128, Issue -, Pages 87-95

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2017.02.007

Keywords

Ni-base superalloys; Transmission electron microscopy; Selective laser melting; Solidification microstructure; Tensile behaviour

Funding

  1. Advanced Materials & Processing Laboratory (AMPLab)
  2. School of Metallurgy and Materials
  3. Centre for Electron Microscopy at the University of Birmingham

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Specimens of Selectively Laser Melted (SLM) CM247LC powder have been characterised using analytical scanning and transmission electron microscopy. In specimens from the bulk, it has been found that longitudinal sections consist mainly of columnar gamma grains, containing virtually identically oriented cells, approximately 700 nm in width and length up to hundreds of microns. These cells are separated from adjacent cells and from adjacent grains by gamma'/gamma eutectic, by high densities of Hf/Ti/Ta/W-rich precipitates and high densities of dislocations. The eutectic gamma' is up to about 50 nm in diameter but up to 10 nm within the cells. The microstructure in the top layer is similar to that taken from the bulk, but single-track samples are heterogeneous along the track length. The microstructures are interpreted in terms of the precipitation sequence, the volume fraction of eutectic and partitioning of the solute elements during solidification and the influence of subsequent laser-tracks. The cooling rate during solidification, calculated from the observed cell diameters is about 106 K/s, but the value obtained from the size of gamma' within the bulk is about 104 K/s. It is suggested that the discrepancy is due to the limited accuracy of this approach. Tensile tests on as-fabricated samples show that the yield strength is comparable with that of cast samples after standard heat treatments. The high strength of the as-fabricated samples is interpreted in terms the high densities of precipitates and dislocations in cell boundaries, the fine cell structure and the gamma' within cells. (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of Acta Materialia Inc. All rights reserved.

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