Towards Selective Laser Melting of High-Density Tungsten

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Abstract

Selective laser melting (SLM) of tungsten (W) is challenging due to its high melting point and brittleness, resulting in defects including balling phenomenon, porosity and cracks. In this work, high-density crack-free SLM W was fabricated by employing cost-effective powders modified through air jet milling. The influence of the SLM processing parameters on microstructure, density, crack formation and the resulting mechanical properties of SLM W was investigated. Laser energy density and hatch distance were found to be the most important parameters in controlling porosity and crack formation of SLM W. The check-like microstructure in horizontal plane was induced by the difference in thermal gradients, which were caused by the movement of the heat source between overlapping regions and central regions of the molten pool. Combined efforts including powder modification through air jet milling, a 67° rotation scanning strategy, a hatch distance of 0.08 mm and a laser speed of 450 mm/s result in dense crack-free SLM W with relative density of 99.3%, microhardness of 403 HV50, and bending strength of 154 MPa. Additionally, the microstructure changed upon annealing at 1200 °C, accompanied by the reduced anisotropy of mechanical properties on both horizontal and vertical plane.

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APA

Zhang, H., Wang, D., Li, X., Yin, F., Zhang, L., Li, X., & Qu, X. (2023). Towards Selective Laser Melting of High-Density Tungsten. Metals, 13(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/met13081431

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