In situ observation of crystal rotation in Ni-based superalloy during additive manufacturing process

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Abstract

Understanding the dynamic process of epitaxial microstructure forming in laser additive manufacturing is very important for achieving products with a single crystalline texture. Here, we perform in situ, real-time synchrotron Laue diffraction experiments to capture the microstructural evolution of nickel-based single-crystal superalloys during the rapid laser remelting process. In situ synchrotron radiation Laue diffraction characterises the crystal rotation behaviour and stray grain formation process. With a complementary thermomechanical coupled finite element simulation and molecular dynamics simulation, we identify that the crystal rotation is governed by the localised heating/cooling heterogeneity-induced deformation gradient and recognise that the sub-grain rotation caused by rapid dislocation movement could be the origin of granular stray grains at the bottom of the melt pool.

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Zhang, D., Liu, W., Li, Y., Sun, D., Wu, Y., Luo, S., … Zhang, B. (2023). In situ observation of crystal rotation in Ni-based superalloy during additive manufacturing process. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-38727-8

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