Effect of Laser Remelting on Cladding Layer of Inconel 718 Superalloy Formed by Laser Metal Deposition.

Materials (Basel)

School of Mechanical Engineering and Automation, Northeastern University, Shenyang 110819, China.

Published: November 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • The brittle Laves phase in Inconel 718 parts produced through laser metal deposition (LMD) hampers their engineering applications, prompting the need for research on laser remelting (LR) to reduce this issue.
  • Different laser scanning speeds in the LR process significantly influenced the microstructure, phase composition, and hardness of the materials, with slower speeds leading to continuous growth of columnar dendrites and faster speeds refining the Laves phase.
  • Results showed that matching the laser scanning speeds of LMD and LR led to a 22.4% reduction in Laves phase content and a decrease in dendrite spacing, while hardness differences between the LMD and LMD + LR layers were minimal at 12.4 HV.

Article Abstract

The brittle phase (Laves) of Inconel 718 parts formed by laser metal deposition (LMD) represents a bottleneck of the engineering applications. In order to investigate effectiveness of laser remelting (LR) technology on suppressing the formation of Laves phase, different laser scanning speeds of the LR process were adopted to build and remelt the single-pass cladding layers. The evolution of phase composition, microstructural morphology, and hardness of the LMD and LMD + LR specimens were analyzed. The experimental results show that different laser scanning speeds can obviously change the microstructural evolutions, Laves phase, and hardness. A low laser scanning speed (360 mm/min) made columnar dendrite uninterruptedly grow from the bottom to the top of the cladding layer. A high laser scanning speed (1320 mm/min) has a significant effect on refining Laves phase and reducing Nb segregation. When the laser scanning speed of LR process is equal to that of LMD, the cladding layers can be completely remelted and the content of Laves phase of the LMD + LR layer is 22.4% lower than that of the LMD layer. As the laser scanning speed increases from 360 to 1320 mm/min, the mean primary dendrite arm spacing (PDAS) values of the remelting area decrease from 6.35 to 3.28 μm gradually. In addition, the low content of Laves phase and porosity contribute to the growth of average hardness. However, the laser scanning speed has a little effect on the average hardness and the maximum average hardness difference of the LMD and LMD + LR layers is only 12.4 HV.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7663109PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma13214927DOI Listing

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