Damage evolution and failure mechanisms in additively manufactured stainless steel

HD Carlton, A Haboub, GF Gallegos… - Materials Science and …, 2016 - Elsevier
HD Carlton, A Haboub, GF Gallegos, DY Parkinson, AA MacDowell
Materials Science and Engineering: A, 2016Elsevier
In situ tensile tests were performed on additively manufactured austenitic stainless steel to
track damage evolution within the material. For these experiments Synchrotron Radiation
micro-Tomography was used to measure three-dimensional pore volume, distribution, and
morphology in stainless steel at the micrometer length-scale while tensile loading was
applied. The results showed that porosity distribution played a larger role in affecting the
fracture mechanisms than measured bulk density. Specifically, additively manufactured …
Abstract
In situ tensile tests were performed on additively manufactured austenitic stainless steel to track damage evolution within the material. For these experiments Synchrotron Radiation micro-Tomography was used to measure three-dimensional pore volume, distribution, and morphology in stainless steel at the micrometer length-scale while tensile loading was applied. The results showed that porosity distribution played a larger role in affecting the fracture mechanisms than measured bulk density. Specifically, additively manufactured stainless steel specimens with large inhomogeneous void distributions displayed a flaw-dominated failure where cracks were shown to initiate at pre-existing voids, while annealed additively manufactured stainless steel specimens, which contained low porosity and randomly distributed pores, displayed fracture mechanisms that closely resembled wrought metal.
Elsevier
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果