Non-oxide precipitates in additively manufactured austenitic stainless steel

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Abstract

Precipitates in an austenitic stainless steel fabricated via any Additive Manufacturing (AM), or 3D printing, technique have been widely reported to be only Mn-Si-rich oxides. However, via Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) studies on a 316L stainless steel, we show that non-oxide precipitates (intermetallics, sulfides, phosphides and carbides) can also form when the steel is fabricated via Laser Metal Deposition (LMD)—a directed energy deposition-type AM technique. An investigation into their origin is conducted with support from precipitation kinetics and finite element heat transfer simulations. It reveals that non-oxide precipitates form during solidification/cooling at temperatures ≥ 0.75Tm (melting point) and temperature rates ≤ 105 K/s, which is the upper end of the maximum rates encountered during LMD but lower than those encountered during Selective Laser Melting (SLM)—a powder-bed type AM technique. Consequently, non-oxide precipitates should form during LMD, as reported in this work, but not during SLM, in consistency with existing literature.

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Upadhyay, M. V., Slama, M. B. H., Gaudez, S., Mohanan, N., Yedra, L., Hallais, S., … Tanguy, A. (2021). Non-oxide precipitates in additively manufactured austenitic stainless steel. Scientific Reports, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-89873-2

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