Residual stress and microstructure of a Ti-6Al-4V wire arc additive manufacturing hybrid demonstrator
Abstract
Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing (WAAM) features high deposition rates and, thus, allows production of large components that are relevant for aerospace applications. However, a lot of aerospace parts are currently produced by forging or machining alone to ensure fast production and to obtain good mechanical properties; the use of these conventional process routes causes high tooling and material costs. A hybrid approach (a combination of forging and WAAM) allows making production more efficient. In this fashion, further structural or functional features can be built in any direction without using additional tools for every part. By using a combination of forging basic geometries with one tool set and adding the functional features by means of WAAM, the tool costs and material waste can be reduced compared to either completely forged or machined parts. One of the factors influencing the structural integrity of additively manufactured parts are (high) residual stresses, generated during the build process. In this study, the triaxial residual stress profiles in a hybrid WAAM part are reported, as determined by neutron diffraction. The analysis is complemented by microstructural investigations, showing a gradient of microstructure (shape and size of grains) along the part height. The highest residual stresses were found in the transition zone (between WAAM and forged part). The total stress range showed to be lower than expected for WAAM components. This could be explained by the thermal history of the component. Mehr anzeigen
Persistenter Link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000421452Publikationsstatus
publishedExterne Links
Zeitschrift / Serie
MetalsBand
Seiten / Artikelnummer
Verlag
MDPIThema
Residual stress; WAAM; Ti-6Al-4V; Additive manufacturing; Neutron diffraction; Hybrid manufacturingOrganisationseinheit
09706 - Bambach, Markus / Bambach, Markus