Laser & Optoelectronics Progress, Volume. 57, Issue 9, 091404(2020)

Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of 316L Stainless Steel in the Selective Laser Melting

Ketai He, Liu Zhou*, and Lechang Yang
Author Affiliations
  • School of Mechanical Engineering, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China
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    Herein, the finite element method (FEM) is used to simulate a single-layer and multi-track temperature field considering the powder-to-solid transition and latent heats of melting at different scanning speeds. The generation of defects, anisotropy of microstructure, and mechanical properties are experimentally analyzed. Results show that increasing the laser scanning speed tends to reduce the wettability of the liquid phase and increase porosity. Moreover, the depth and width of molten pool gradually decrease, which hinders the formation of good metallurgical bonding. Numerous cellular and dendrites are formed in the molten pool, and the high temperature gradient tends to induce planar or cellular dendrites, while the low temperature gradient tends to induce dendritic dendrites. The simulation also demonstrates that the average grain size, grain orientation, strain distribution, and the distribution of the boundary-misorientation angle on the cross-section and longitudinal section show some differences owing to differences in the temperature gradient along different directions. Furthermore, the transverse samples display a higher yield strength, but the ductility is significantly lower than that of vertical samples containing elongated columnar grains along the building direction.

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    Ketai He, Liu Zhou, Lechang Yang. Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of 316L Stainless Steel in the Selective Laser Melting[J]. Laser & Optoelectronics Progress, 2020, 57(9): 091404

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    Paper Information

    Category: Lasers and Laser Optics

    Received: Aug. 19, 2019

    Accepted: Sep. 16, 2019

    Published Online: May. 6, 2020

    The Author Email: Zhou Liu (13269502976@163.com)

    DOI:10.3788/LOP57.091404

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