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Effect of laser melt schedule on the microstructure of additively manufactured IN718 Superalloy...

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Additive Manufacturing
Publication Date
Page Number
104915
Volume
109

Laser powder bed fusion (L-PBF) has enabled the fabrication of geometrically complex metallic structures and components that are challenging to producing using conventional manufacturing approaches. The site-specific and far from equilibrium thermal conditions of L-PBF offer the potential to facilitate multi-length scale design of structure and properties across the atomic-through macro-levels. However, L-PBF systems face scalability challenges due to throughput constraints. Laser rotary powder bed fusion (L-RPBF) systems are being investigated as a solution to enhance the deposition rates compared to conventional L-PBF. Rotary systems also offer additional flexibility for controlling the time structure of melting through laser interleaving on alternating layers. In this study, IN718 test samples were printed using single-laser or interleaved dual-laser configuration in a L-RPBF system to investigates the effect of process settings and melt-interleaving on as-fabricated microstructure. The microstructural evolution, such as grain size and crystallographic texture, was assessed by determining variations in the melt-pool shapes. Laser interleaving leads to a reduction in average grain size compared to single laser by ∼ 40 % at high power (400 W) and by ∼36 % at medium power (370 W). Results presented here identify key challenge for obtaining uniform microstructures and barriers for the broader adoption of high-deposition rate L-RPBF.