Residual stress and texture control in Ti-6Al-4V wire + arc additively manufactured intersections by stress relief and rolling

Date

2018-04-08

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

0264-1275

Format

Free to read from

Citation

J.R. Hönnige, P.A. Colegrove, B. Ahmad, et al., Residual stress and texture control in Ti-6Al-4V wire + arc additively manufactured intersections by stress relief and rolling. Materials and Design, Volume 150, 15 July 2018, Pages 193-205

Abstract

Additively manufactured intersections have the theoretical risk to contain hydrostatic tensile residual stresses, which eventually cannot be thermally stress relieved. The stresses in Ti-6Al-4V wire + arc additively manufactured (WAAM) intersections are lower compared to single pass walls and stresses in continuous walls are larger compared to discontinuous walls with otherwise identical geometry. Thermal stress relief was found to virtually eliminate them.

Inter-pass rolling can yield the desired grain refinement, without having any noteworthy influence on the development of residual stresses. The strain measurement itself by neutron diffraction is facilitated by the refined microstructure, because the otherwise textured microstructure produces anisotropic peak intensity, not allowing Pawley refinement. Without rolling, the {101¯1} and {101¯3} family of hcp planes are the only ones that diffract consistently in the three principal directions.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Wire + arc additive manufacturing, Intersections, Rolling, Stress relieving, Ti-6Al-4V, Microst

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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