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Additively manufactured hierarchical stainless steels with high strength and ductility

Authors :
Manyalibo J. Matthews
Thomas Voisin
Tien T. Roehling
Yin Zhang
Y. Morris Wang
Alex V. Hamza
Wen Chen
Zhi Zeng
Joseph T. McKeown
Melissa K. Santala
Philip J. Depond
Nicholas P. Calta
Ting Zhu
Zan Li
Ryan T. Ott
Jianchao Ye
Source :
Nature Materials. 17:63-71
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Many traditional approaches for strengthening steels typically come at the expense of useful ductility, a dilemma known as strength-ductility trade-off. New metallurgical processing might offer the possibility of overcoming this. Here we report that austenitic 316L stainless steels additively manufactured via a laser powder-bed-fusion technique exhibit a combination of yield strength and tensile ductility that surpasses that of conventional 316L steels. High strength is attributed to solidification-enabled cellular structures, low-angle grain boundaries, and dislocations formed during manufacturing, while high uniform elongation correlates to a steady and progressive work-hardening mechanism regulated by a hierarchically heterogeneous microstructure, with length scales spanning nearly six orders of magnitude. In addition, solute segregation along cellular walls and low-angle grain boundaries can enhance dislocation pinning and promote twinning. This work demonstrates the potential of additive manufacturing to create alloys with unique microstructures and high performance for structural applications.

Details

ISSN :
14764660 and 14761122
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Materials
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2baf6f748ed62eafb76e8881eab04d95