Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5451655 | Journal of Materials Science & Technology | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Selective laser melting was used to produce an aluminum alloy Al-8.5Fe-1.3V-1.7Si (wt%). The effects of heat treatment on microstructure evolution and phase stability during long-term thermal exposure of the deposits were investigated. Results show that the microquasi-crystalline phase, Al12(Fe,V)3Si and AlmFe metastable phases coexisted with α-Al in the as-produced alloy. Annealing at 400â°C resulted in decomposition of microquasi-crystalline phase and supersaturated α-Al into Al12(Fe, V)3Si phase in the fusion zone, accompanied by the decrease in alloy hardness. The activation energy of this decomposition process was 115âkJ/mol. A more homogenous microstructure was obtained after annealing at 400â°C for 60âmin, which was resistant to coarsening exposed at 425â°C up to 500âh. The Al12(Fe,V)3Si and AlmFe phases were coarsened at 475 and 525â°C with increasing the exposure time. Coarsening of Al12(Fe,V)3Si phase was attributed to a combination of volume diffusion and grain boundary diffusion mechanism of Fe. Heat treatment at 600â°C resulted in accelerated microstructure coarsening and formation of large-sized equilibrium phases, which significantly degraded the room temperature microhardness.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Chemistry
Authors
Shao-Bo Sun, Li-Jing Zheng, Jin-Hui Liu, Hu Zhang,