Turning of Additively Manufactured Ti6Al4V: Effect of the Highly Oriented Microstructure on the Surface Integrity
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Material and Processing Parameters
Al | V | Fe | O | C | N | H | Ti |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
5.50–6.75 | 3.5–4.5 | <0.30 | <0.20 | <0.08 | <0.05 | <0.015 | Bal. |
2.2. Machining Tests
2.3. Characterization of the Machined Samples
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Microstructure of the As-Built and Heat-Treated LPBFed Samples
3.2. Microstructure of the Machined LPBFed Samples
3.3. Surface Texture of the Machined LPBFed Samples
3.4. Surface Defects of the Machined LPBFed Samples
4. Conclusions
- The scanning strategy had an impact on the size of the columnar grains (+44% grains width in the case of stripes with respect to chessboard) which is related to the material microhardness (−17% HV0.05 in the case of stripes with respect to chessboard) and the density of the αGB layers after heat treatment.
- The microstructural anisotropy deriving from the AM process greatly influenced the surface integrity of the machined samples both in terms of sub-surface (−35% SPD layer extent with −36% nanohardness in the case of stripes with respect to chessboard) and superficial features (overall stripes scanning strategy led to rougher and more spiky surfaces with respect to chessboard one).
- The weak αGBs promoted the material removal, especially when favorably oriented with respect to the cutting edge, allowing for a 28% reduction of the surface roughness and 61% reduction of peaks heights in the case of facing rather than cylindrical turning.
- Cryogenic cooling emphasized the effect of the material anisotropy in determining the surface integrity.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sample ID | Scanning Strategy | Turning Operation | Cooling Condition |
---|---|---|---|
S1 | Stripes | Cylindrical | Flood |
S2 | Stripes | Cylindrical | Cryogenic |
S3 | Stripes | Face | Flood |
S4 | Stripes | Face | Cryogenic |
S5 | Chess | Cylindrical | Flood |
S6 | Chess | Cylindrical | Cryogenic |
S7 | Chess | Face | Flood |
S8 | Chess | Face | Cryogenic |
Scanning Strategy | Mean Size of β Grain (μm) | Hardness HV0.05 |
---|---|---|
Stripes | 157 ± 37 | 307 ± 14 |
Chess | 106 ± 11 | 359 ± 18 |
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Lizzul, L.; Bertolini, R.; Ghiotti, A.; Bruschi, S. Turning of Additively Manufactured Ti6Al4V: Effect of the Highly Oriented Microstructure on the Surface Integrity. Materials 2021, 14, 2842. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14112842
Lizzul L, Bertolini R, Ghiotti A, Bruschi S. Turning of Additively Manufactured Ti6Al4V: Effect of the Highly Oriented Microstructure on the Surface Integrity. Materials. 2021; 14(11):2842. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14112842
Chicago/Turabian StyleLizzul, Lucia, Rachele Bertolini, Andrea Ghiotti, and Stefania Bruschi. 2021. "Turning of Additively Manufactured Ti6Al4V: Effect of the Highly Oriented Microstructure on the Surface Integrity" Materials 14, no. 11: 2842. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14112842
APA StyleLizzul, L., Bertolini, R., Ghiotti, A., & Bruschi, S. (2021). Turning of Additively Manufactured Ti6Al4V: Effect of the Highly Oriented Microstructure on the Surface Integrity. Materials, 14(11), 2842. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14112842