3.1. Powder Material
The first stage of the research was to investigate the morphology, phase composition, physical, technological and magnetic properties of the initial 1CP powder, consisting of iron and alloying elements: boron, carbon and silicon [
21]. The chemical composition of the initial powder is presented in
Table 1. The technology of the 1CP powder manufacturing was gas atomization [
22].
The SEM image in
Figure 1 shows that the powder material is spherical and rounded particles.
The results of the particle size distribution of the powder are shown in
Table 2. The initial powder particle size is Gaussian distributed with a mean value of 41.8 μm. This is a typical range for use in selective laser melting [
18,
23].
The results of the investigation of the physical and technological properties of the powder are shown in
Table 3. The ability to flow freely through the Hall funnel indicates the possibility of good powder spreading during the formation of thin powder layers in the selective laser melting process. The apparent density is 56.8% of the skeletal density, which indicates an acceptable packing density formed by this powder during the formation of the powder layer.
The X-ray diffraction pattern of the powder sample is shown in
Figure 2. The following phases are present in the sample: solid solution α-Fe(Si) and iron boride Fe
2B.
Figure 3 shows the DSC results of the powder material presented by two curves: the red curve for the primary heating of the original material and the blue one for the secondary heating of the material (cooled down after primary heating). The primary heating curve shows peaks indicating a phase transformation during heating. This process occurs for 1CP alloy powder in the temperature range from 450 to 575 °C. The absence of the secondary heating peaks shows the accordance of the peaks to the crystallization process. Based on the DSC data it could be concluded that heating above 450 °C would lead to the beginning of crystallization processes of the amorphous phase in case of the presence of the amorphous phase in the samples during heat treatment of samples obtained from this powder. According to this data, it was decided to use annealing heat treatment of samples at 440 °C. This annealing temperature corresponds to the recommended temperature for amorphous ribbons from 1CP [
21] and the heat treatment mode used in further study: heating at a rate of 10 °C/min to 440 °C, holding for 30 min, cooling outside the furnace. The halo, which is not clearly visible in the diffraction pattern (
Figure 2), is partially visible in the region of 2Θ = 42–47. The absence of an obvious halo can be explained by the small volume content of the amorphous phase in the powder material.
Figure 4 shows the results of investigation microstructure of 1CP powder by transmission electron microscopy.
Two phases are present in the studied powder, one of which has a crystalline structure as evidenced by electron diffraction (
Figure 4d) and the other has an amorphous structure as evidenced by electron diffraction in
Figure 4c. The amorphous phase is present both as separate areas (upper part of
Figure 4a) and as areas distributed around the crystalline phase (
Figure 4b and lower part of
Figure 4a).
The results of the study on the magnetic properties of the powder are shown in
Table 4. The hysteresis loop of the powder is shown in
Figure 5. 1CP can be considered as a soft magnet with a relatively high coercive force and a low residual magnetization, but a huge saturation magnetization.
3.2. Single Track Study
In order to determine the range of applicability parameters for the selective laser melting process, a series of single tracks were melted on a 1CP substrate using different values of laser power P and scanning speed V, which were selected after the preliminary tests have been made with various values of laser power and scanning speed and provided continuous tracks.
The modes used for single-track series are presented in
Table 5. The linear energy density is calculated as the ratio of a laser beam power to a scanning speed.
The SEM images of the tracks presented in
Figure 6 show that there are transverse cracks repeated at distances greater than or close to 200–300 µm. A similar pattern is observed for all the tracks. Therefore, it was decided not to use values of one pass laser length exceeding 200 µm in the next experiments.
Figure 7 shows SEM images of the structure of the melted tracks in a cross-sectional view. The geometric characteristics of the resulting tracks are shown in
Table 6. Track 1 has acceptable geometrical characteristics, but there is a pore in its cross-section and a crack at the border with the substrate. The linear energy density of the mode of this track is 75 J/m, as well as of track 4, which has good geometrical characteristics and has no visible defects, but the scanning speed used in the growth of the first track was too low for the used power, which led to the formation of defects. Tracks 2 and 3 were formed at lower linear energy densities (60 J/m and 50 J/m), which were insufficient to make a track with acceptable deposit height.
Tracks 4 and 5 have good geometrical characteristics (sufficient height of the deposited metal and penetration depth) and no visible defects, so modes 4 and 5 are used in the next experiments.
Thus, it was decided to use a melt track length not exceeding 200 µm, with values of P = 90 W, P = 120 W and V = 1200 mm/s.
3.3. Selective Laser Melting of Samples Investigation
As part of the study, eight rectangular samples were manufactured. Samples have been successively made in a nitrogen atmosphere. The plane orthogonal to the height of the cube was divided into cells, each containing two cross-sections of columnar elements, the distance between the centers of which corresponds to the hatch distance parameter h, with the distance between cells corresponding to the offset parameter m. The length of one pass of the laser beam also corresponds to the parameter
h. The building scheme is presented in
Figure 8.
The image of manufactured samples is shown in
Figure 9. The build modes are presented in
Table 7, the scanning speed
V and the thickness of the powder layer
t were fixed
V = 1200 mm/s,
t = 50 µm.
The samples manufactured at
P = 90 W (
Figure 10, 1–4) are less dense than those made at
P = 120 W (
Figure 10, 5–8). Increasing laser power allows the formation of larger structural elements due to the melting of a larger volume of initial powder, which leads to the formation of a denser structure. The increasing value of the offset (
Figure 10, 1–4; 5–8) is accompanied by a decrease in the density of samples due to a violation of its structural unity caused by the separation of the columnar elements from each other. The hatch distance parameter h determines the presence of a merger of a pair of columnar elements into a single element: the samples obtained at
h = 100 μm (
Figure 10, 1–3; 5–7) are characterized by united elements, in contrast to the samples obtained at
h = 200 μm (
Figure 10, 4; 8).
Cross-sectional specimens were prepared for selected columnar elements of samples 4 and 8 (for these samples only the separation of single elements was possible) for examination with a scanning electron microscope. SEM images of the microstructure of the elements are shown in
Figure 11 and
Figure 12.
The structure of element 8 is characterized by the shape of the layer expressed by the presence of an arc section on the boundary line of each layer. This phenomenon is associated with increased laser power P, the value of which for sample 8 was 120 W. In this case, the change in the shape of the layer is associated with deeper penetration of laser irradiation for a separate section of the layer and uneven distribution of thermal energy over the contact spot of the laser with the metal.
The phase composition was investigated by X-ray diffraction analysis. The X-ray diffraction patterns of the samples are shown in
Figure 13.
Based on X-ray diffraction analysis it was found that the following phases are present in the sample: α-Fe(Si) solid solution and Fe
2B iron boride. The third phase present in the microstructure images of the samples can be identified as an ordered Fe
3Si solid solution. The morphology of the etched cavities is similar to the crystal morphology of this phase [
24]. The α-Fe(Si) solid solution has a similar crystallographic structure to the ordered Fe
3Si solid solution, due to which the X-ray diffraction analysis may not allow the detection of the reflexes of this phase if the α-Fe(Si) structure prevails [
24]. Therefore, researchers [
19,
23] during the X-ray diffraction analysis of samples of Fe-Si-B alloy obtained by selective laser melting noted the Fe
3Si phase together with α-Fe(Si) on the peaks corresponding to α-Fe(Si).
The obtained DSC curves (
Figure 14) indicate the almost complete absence of crystallization processes during the heating of the samples. However, the curve of primary heating of sample 4 is characterized by the presence of small peaks, and their absence during secondary heating (which cannot be said for the curve of sample 8), indicating the presence of a small amount of amorphous phase in sample 4.
Onset crystallization temperatures and enthalpy of the process are presented in
Table 8. TEM electron diffraction data presented in
Figure 15 proves the presence of the amorphous phase of sample 4.
Mechanical and magnetic properties were investigated for the initial and annealed samples. The purpose of annealing was to decrease the level of internal stresses in samples and investigate the effect of it for properties as defined above. The hardness data of the samples (
Table 9) indicate that the hardness of sample 4 is slightly higher than that of sample 8. The difference between the mean hardness values is within the standard deviation of the samples (σ
4 = 155, σ
8 = 92). Hence, the laser power has no effect on the samples of this material in the investigated power range. The authors [
1] investigated samples of a similar composition alloy and obtained hardness values close to those presented in this study. The annealed samples show an approximately 40% reduction values of hardness.
The study of the magnetic properties was carried out for samples 4 and 8. The magnetization curves of the samples are shown in
Figure 16. The magnetization curves of the samples after heat treatment are shown in
Figure 17. The main parameters of magnetic measurements are summarized in
Table 8. The coercivity of the measured samples does not differ significantly from each other. At the same time, there is a difference in the shape of the hysteresis loop (sample 8 achieves a saturation at slightly lower values of field) and the values of residual magnetization. A comparison of the obtained results with the data for amorphous ribbons obtained by melt spinning technology for 1CP alloy [
21] shows that the coercivity is much higher and the coefficient of rectangularity is lower for samples made by SLM.
The change of coercivity of annealed samples is within the margin of error. Sample 4 showed higher values of saturation magnetization (2.5% higher), residual magnetization (35% higher) and rectangularity coefficient (30% higher) after annealing. At the same time, sample 8 after heat treatment shows almost the same values of magnetic parameters as before heat treatment. The changing of magnetic properties for sample 4 is possibly related to a relaxation of internal stresses and the presence of a small amount of amorphous phase, magnetic properties changing of which after annealing is stronger than the crystalline phase. Sample 8 has a lower value of internal stresses due to the higher laser power used for its manufacturing and demonstrates no changing magnetic properties after annealing. Therefore, the heat treatment mode recommended for amorphous ribbons of this material [
21] should be reevaluated for selective laser melting samples.
Further research requires the use of scanning strategies with different patterns and multiplicity, substrate heating and cooling experiments, and better optimization of physical and geometric process parameters and reaching more amorphous phase content.