Hardening steels by the generation of transient phase using additive manufacturing

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Abstract

In the present work, the tensile properties of 15–5 PH steel fabricated by selective laser melting (SLM) were examined with respect to the transient austenite phase. Compared with the 8%-transient-phase sample, the 18%-transient-phase one shows higher ultimate tensile strength and relatively low yield strength, as well as hardening behavior. We conducted in-situ neutron-diffraction study to examine the microstructure evolution for mechanistic understanding. After applying the external load, most non-equilibrium, retained austenite in the 8%-transient-phase sample transforms before the yield strength, whereas in the 18%-transient-phase sample only 50% of the austenite transforms. Accompanying with the phase transformation, a decrease in the dislocation density and the dislocation strain energy-assisted phase transformation of the ferrite phase are found in the 8%-transient-phase sample even before yielding, which, however, is not the case in the 18%-transient-phase sample. The study demonstrates the SLM enables tuning the amount of transient-phase ratio and coherency between phases to realize a mechanical property control for additive manufactured steel.

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Huang, E. W., Lee, S. Y., Jain, J., Tong, Y., An, K., Tsou, N. T., … Chou, H. S. (2019). Hardening steels by the generation of transient phase using additive manufacturing. Intermetallics, 109, 60–67. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.intermet.2019.03.004

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