Designing the microstructural constituents of an additively manufactured near β Ti alloy for an enhanced mechanical and corrosion response

Abstract

Additive manufacturing of near β-type Ti-13Nb-13Zr alloys using the laser powder bed fusion process (LPBF) opens up new avenues to tailor the microstructure and subsequent macro-scale properties that aids in developing new generation patient-specific, load-bearing orthopedic implants. In this work, we investigate a wide range of LPBF parameter space to optimize the volumetric energy density, surface characteristics and melt track widths to achieve a stable process and part density of greater than 99 %. Further, optimized sample states were achieved via thermal post-processing using standard capability aging, super-transus (900 °C) and sub-transus (660 °C) heat treatment strategies with varying quenching mediums (air, water and ice). The applied heat treatment strategies induce various fractions of α, martensite (α', α'') in combination with the β phase and strongly correlated with the observed enhanced mechanical properties and a relatively low elastic modulus. In summary, our work highlights a practical strategy for optimizing the mechanical and corrosion properties of a LPBF produced near β-type Ti-13Nb-13Zr alloy via careful evaluation of processing and post-processing steps and the interrelation to the corresponding microstructures. Corrosion studies revealed excellent corrosion resistances of the heat-treated LPBF samples comparable to wrought Ti-13Nb-13Zr alloys.

Description
Keywords
Additive manufacturing (AM), Beta Titanium alloys, Corrosion, Laser powder bed fusion (LPBF)
Citation
Hariharan, A., Goldberg, P., Gustmann, T., Maawad, E., Pilz, S., Schell, F., et al. (2022). Designing the microstructural constituents of an additively manufactured near β Ti alloy for an enhanced mechanical and corrosion response. 217. https://doi.org//10.1016/j.matdes.2022.110618
Collections
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Unported