Measurement of the Anisotropic Dynamic Elastic Constants of Additive Manufactured and Wrought Ti6Al4V Alloys.

Materials (Basel)

Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel.

Published: January 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • This paper examines the elastic properties of Ti6Al4V alloy in four manufacturing conditions, revealing differences in Young's modulus, shear modulus, and Poisson's ratio.
  • A specially designed sample was used to measure sound wave velocities, helping to derive elastic constant tensors and 3D Young's modulus maps, while EBSD and μCT techniques analyzed grain structures and defects.
  • Findings indicate that AM materials are less anisotropic than hot rolled alloys; the study emphasizes the importance of manufacturing methods and orientations in material properties for better mechanical design and quality control.

Article Abstract

Additively manufactured (AM) materials and hot rolled materials are typically orthotropic, and exhibit anisotropic elastic properties. This paper elucidates the anisotropic elastic properties (Young's modulus, shear modulus, and Poisson's ratio) of Ti6Al4V alloy in four different conditions: three AM (by selective laser melting, SLM, electron beam melting, EBM, and directed energy deposition, DED, processes) and one wrought alloy (for comparison). A specially designed polygon sample allowed measurement of 12 sound wave velocities (SWVs), employing the dynamic pulse-echo ultrasonic technique. In conjunction with the measured density values, these SWVs enabled deriving of the tensor of elastic constants () and the three-dimensional (3D) Young's moduli maps. Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and micro-computed tomography (μCT) were employed to characterize the grain size and orientation as well as porosity and other defects which could explain the difference in the measured elastic constants of the four materials. All three types of AM materials showed only minor anisotropy. The wrought (hot rolled) alloy exhibited the highest density, virtually pore-free μCT images, and the highest ultrasonic anisotropy and polarity behavior. EBSD analysis revealed that a thin β-phase layer that formed along the elongated grain boundaries caused the ultrasonic polarity behavior. The finding that the elastic properties depend on the manufacturing process and on the angle relative to either the rolling direction or the AM build direction should be taken into account in the design of products. The data reported herein is valuable for materials selection and finite element analyses in mechanical design. The pulse-echo measurement procedure employed in this study may be further adapted and used for quality control of AM materials and parts.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8779917PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma15020638DOI Listing

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