Multiscale characterization of WAAMed ...
Document type :
Article dans une revue scientifique: Article original
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Title :
Multiscale characterization of WAAMed martensitic stainless steel: Correlation between experimental AM thermal cycles, microstructural evolution and mechanical properties
Author(s) :
L’Hostis, Jules [Auteur]
Unité Matériaux et Transformations - UMR 8207 [UMET]
Thuinet, Ludovic [Auteur]
Unité Matériaux et Transformations (UMET) - UMR 8207
Cadel, Emmanuel [Auteur]
Groupe de physique des matériaux [GPM]
Avettand-Fènoël, Marie-Noëlle [Auteur]
Unité Matériaux et Transformations (UMET) - UMR 8207
Unité Matériaux et Transformations - UMR 8207 [UMET]
Thuinet, Ludovic [Auteur]

Unité Matériaux et Transformations (UMET) - UMR 8207
Cadel, Emmanuel [Auteur]
Groupe de physique des matériaux [GPM]
Avettand-Fènoël, Marie-Noëlle [Auteur]

Unité Matériaux et Transformations (UMET) - UMR 8207
Journal title :
Acta Materialia
Abbreviated title :
Acta Materialia
Volume number :
291
Pages :
120972
Publisher :
Elsevier
Publication date :
2025-04-02
ISSN :
1359-6454
English keyword(s) :
Wire-Arc additive manufacturing
Er410 NiMo martensitic stainless steel
Thermal history
Microstructural evolution
Mechanical properties
Er410 NiMo martensitic stainless steel
Thermal history
Microstructural evolution
Mechanical properties
HAL domain(s) :
Chimie/Matériaux
Physique [physics]/Matière Condensée [cond-mat]/Science des matériaux [cond-mat.mtrl-sci]
Physique [physics]/Matière Condensée [cond-mat]/Science des matériaux [cond-mat.mtrl-sci]
English abstract : [en]
An Er410 NiMo martensitic stainless steel thin wall was built using wire-arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) based on cold metal transfer (CMT) to study the microstructural evolution during elaboration. For this purpose, ...
Show more >An Er410 NiMo martensitic stainless steel thin wall was built using wire-arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) based on cold metal transfer (CMT) to study the microstructural evolution during elaboration. For this purpose, thermal cycles were recorded in situ using thermocouples inserted in the melt pool and building parameters were tailored to maximize the reproducibility of thermal cycles. The wall structure was characterized from the macroscopic to the atomic scale and its hardness as well as its tensile properties were measured. Three macroscopic zones could be differentiated in the wall depending on the thermal conditions: the top zone, fully re-austenitized during deposition of the last layer, the middle zone, tempered by at least one thermal cycle and the bottom zone, under thermal influence of the substrate. The microstructure of the wall is almost fully martensitic, organized inside large columnar grains oriented towards the building direction, with a small fraction of residual inter-lath austenite only detected in the tempered middle layers. At the microscopic and mesoscopic scales, C, Cr and Ni atomic segregations are revealed in the top zone, and C and Cr segregations in the middle zone. During re-austenitization, necklaces of new small prior austenite grains (PAGs) formed at the boundaries of the previous ones. A strong microstructural differentiation occurs during the 3rd reheating, where the top of a layer is fully re-austenitized while the middle and bottom parts experience an inter-critical and subcritical thermal treatment, respectively. This differentiation leads to periodic oscillations of the materials’ hardness in the middle zone along the building direction which are mainly explained by different degrees of tempering in the martensite. Mechanisms are proposed to explain the different microstructural evolutions during elaboration. Finally, tensile testing shows isotropic mechanical properties, which are close to those of the desired commercial “tempered” state.Show less >
Show more >An Er410 NiMo martensitic stainless steel thin wall was built using wire-arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) based on cold metal transfer (CMT) to study the microstructural evolution during elaboration. For this purpose, thermal cycles were recorded in situ using thermocouples inserted in the melt pool and building parameters were tailored to maximize the reproducibility of thermal cycles. The wall structure was characterized from the macroscopic to the atomic scale and its hardness as well as its tensile properties were measured. Three macroscopic zones could be differentiated in the wall depending on the thermal conditions: the top zone, fully re-austenitized during deposition of the last layer, the middle zone, tempered by at least one thermal cycle and the bottom zone, under thermal influence of the substrate. The microstructure of the wall is almost fully martensitic, organized inside large columnar grains oriented towards the building direction, with a small fraction of residual inter-lath austenite only detected in the tempered middle layers. At the microscopic and mesoscopic scales, C, Cr and Ni atomic segregations are revealed in the top zone, and C and Cr segregations in the middle zone. During re-austenitization, necklaces of new small prior austenite grains (PAGs) formed at the boundaries of the previous ones. A strong microstructural differentiation occurs during the 3rd reheating, where the top of a layer is fully re-austenitized while the middle and bottom parts experience an inter-critical and subcritical thermal treatment, respectively. This differentiation leads to periodic oscillations of the materials’ hardness in the middle zone along the building direction which are mainly explained by different degrees of tempering in the martensite. Mechanisms are proposed to explain the different microstructural evolutions during elaboration. Finally, tensile testing shows isotropic mechanical properties, which are close to those of the desired commercial “tempered” state.Show less >
Language :
Anglais
Peer reviewed article :
Oui
Audience :
Internationale
Popular science :
Non
Collections :
Research team(s) :
Métallurgie Physique et Génie des Matériaux
Submission date :
2025-04-09T19:14:20Z
2025-04-14T10:50:57Z
2025-04-14T10:50:57Z
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