Hierarchical microstructure of laser powder bed fusion produced face-centered-cubic-structured equiatomic crfenimn multicomponent alloy

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Abstract

A cobalt-free equiatomic CrFeNiMn multicomponent alloy was fabricated from gas-atomized powder using laser powder bed fusion (L-PBF), also known as selective laser melting (SLM). The as-built specimens had a single face-centered cubic (FCC) structure, relative density of 98%, and hardness up to 248 HV0.5 for both the scanning speeds applied. In this work, we report the hierarchical microstructural features observed in the as-built specimens. These are comprised of melt pools, grains, cell structures including dendritic cells, elongated cells, equiaxed cells (~500 nm), and sub-cells (150–300 nm). The cell and sub-cell walls are composed of a notably high density of dislocations. In addition, segregation of Mn and Ni was detected at the cell walls, but only occasionally at the sub-cell walls. SLM exhibits the capability to produce FCC-structured equiatomic CrFeNiMn multicomponent alloy with the refined and hierarchical microstructure.

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Yang, X., Ge, Y., Lehtonen, J., & Hannula, S. P. (2020). Hierarchical microstructure of laser powder bed fusion produced face-centered-cubic-structured equiatomic crfenimn multicomponent alloy. Materials, 13(20), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13204498

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