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Nano-twining and deformation-induced martensitic transformation in a duplex stainless steel 2205 fabricated by laser powder bed fusion

Authors :
He, XY
Wang, H
Liao, XZ
Ringer, SP
Haghdadi, N ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2163-8949
Primig, S ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7682-5899
He, XY
Wang, H
Liao, XZ
Ringer, SP
Haghdadi, N ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2163-8949
Primig, S ; https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7682-5899
Source :
urn:ISSN:2214-8604; Additive Manufacturing, 84, 104110
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Duplex stainless steels (DSSs) possess desirable combinations of mechanical properties and excellent corrosion resistance due to their composition and equilibrium microstructure of roughly equivalent fractions of ferrite and austenite. They are used in harsh environments such as marine infrastructures, oil & gas, and paper & pulp industries. Components with complex geometries are often required for these applications. Additive manufacturing (AM) techniques such as laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) can be harnessed to fabricate components with greatest complexity. However, AM fabrication is well-known to promote non-equilibrium microstructures with high dislocation densities and Cr2N precipitates, resulting in inferior ductility. This is generally regarded as a challenge, however, short heat treatments of such as-built microstructures have been shown to attain refined duplex equilibrium microstructures. Recently, annealed LPBF DSS 2205 has been reported to possess strength higher than wrought counterparts and ductility properties better than the as-built state. However, the microstructural phenomena and deformation mechanisms behind these attractive properties remain poorly understood. Through multi-scale microstructural characterization, we show that the improved strength results not only from the hard ferrite phase, but also fine austenite grain size and nanoscale oxide dispersion strengthening. The enhanced ductility may be attributed to a combination of deformation mechanisms including dislocation slip, stacking fault formation, deformation twinning, and a deformation-induced martensitic transformation. We discuss how the level of microstructural complexity and solid-state phase transformations during LPBF and annealing can unlock multiple strengthening mechanisms during tensile deformation. Such fundamental understanding is crucial for designing AM parts with reproducible and optimised mechanical properties.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
urn:ISSN:2214-8604; Additive Manufacturing, 84, 104110
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1458867776
Document Type :
Electronic Resource