Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
828509 | Materials & Design (1980-2015) | 2015 | 38 Pages |
Abstract
Thermal processing and mechanical characterization of tensile specimens fabricated from bulk 17-4 PH material produced by selective laser melting (SLM) is presented. Prior to specimen evaluation, various industry standard and non-standard heat treatments were performed. The focus of this thermal processing was to evaluate the effect of aging on mechanical performance with or without a prior solution heat treatment. Volumetric fraction of metastable austenite was measured to vary with heat treatments performed and the initial conditions from which aging was initiated. Material aged following a solution heat treatment was found to have an austenite reversion from a fully martensitic structure to volumetric fractions as high as 20.4%. Whereas, initial concentrations of retained austenite in SLM as-fabricated material increased following a peak-age heat treatment, but decreased with higher temperature, overaged heat treatments. Specimens with large amounts of austenite demonstrated stress-induced transformation to martensite during tensile testing. This behavior was reflected in substantially reduced yield strengths, increased work hardening rates across greater ranges of strain, and delayed onset of localized plastic deformation. Ultimate tensile strengths for varieties of specimens aged to the peak-aged condition were similar, but differed greatly at strain levels where this strength was achieved.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Engineering (General)
Authors
Tyler LeBrun, Takayuki Nakamoto, Keitaro Horikawa, Hidetoshi Kobayashi,