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Review

Research Viewpoint on Performance Enhancement for Very-High-Cycle Fatigue of Ti-6Al-4V Alloys via Laser-Based Powder Bed Fusion

1
School of Civil Engineering, Harbin University, Harbin 150086, China
2
Heilongjiang Province Key Laboratory of Underground Engineering Technology, Harbin University, Harbin 150086, China
3
China Construction Sixth Engineering Division Co., Ltd., Tianjin 300012, China
4
College of Aerospace and Civil Engineering, Harbin Engineering University, Harbin 150001, China
5
School of Mechanical Engineering, Guangxi University, Nanning 530004, China
6
Department of Microelectronics, Delft University of Technology, 2628 CD Delft, The Netherlands
7
LNM, Institute of Mechanics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Crystals 2024, 14(9), 749; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst14090749
Submission received: 31 July 2024 / Revised: 14 August 2024 / Accepted: 20 August 2024 / Published: 23 August 2024
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Fatigue and Fracture of Crystalline Metal Structures)

Abstract

:
Additive manufacturing (AM) or 3D printing is a promising industrial technology that enables rapid prototyping of complex configurations. Powder Bed Fusion (PBF) is one of the most popular AM techniques for metallic materials. Until today, only a few metals and alloys are available for AM, e.g., titanium alloys, the most common of which is Ti-6Al-4V. After optimization of PBF parameters, with or without post processing such as heat treatment or hot isostatic pressing, the printed titanium alloy can easily reach tensile strengths of over 1100 MPa due to the quick cooling of the AM process. However, attributed to the unique features of metallurgical defects and microstructure introduced by this AM process, their fatigue strength has been low, often less than 30% of the tensile strength, especially in very-high-cycle regimes, i.e., failure life beyond 107 cycles. Here, based on our group’s research on the very-high-cycle fatigue (VHCF) of additively manufactured (AMed) Ti-6Al-4V alloys, we have refined the basic quantities of porosity, metallurgical defects, and the AMed microstructure, summarized the main factors limiting their VHCF strengths, and suggested possible ways to improve VHCF performance.

1. Introduction

Titanium (Ti) is known as the rising third metal element, after iron (Fe) and aluminum (Al), and titanium alloys are widely used in a variety of engineering and living scenarios. The element titanium has an isotropic transition: being α phase with hexagonal close-packed (HCP) lattice at temperatures below 882.5 °C, i.e., β transus, in standard atmosphere, and β phase with body-centered cubic (BCC) lattice at high temperatures above β transus. Some chemical elements, e.g., Al and vanadium (V), can alloy titanium alloys to stabilize their α and β phases, called α and β stabilizing elements, respectively. Depending on the content of α and β stabilizing elements, titanium alloys can be divided into four types: near α, α + β, metastable β, and β [1,2].
Additive manufacturing (AM), also known as 3D printing, is a form of rapid prototyping, a technique for constructing objects by printing layer by layer from a digital model file using bondable materials such as powdered metals or photosensible resins [3]. Powder bed fusion (PBF) is one of the advanced AM technologies, which has gradually matured over a long period of research and industrial development [4,5,6,7,8,9]. This development has enabled the widespread adoption of commercial applications of PBF, particularly to produce high-value products that are not technically feasible with traditional manufacturing processes [10,11,12,13,14]. Figure 1a gives an illustration of PBF with a scan strategy of meandering paths [15]. At first, a powder bed of metallic materials was stacked layer by layer with a thickness of t, and then a moving heat source with a power of p, usually a laser or electron beam, was focused on the top of the powder bed along a specific track with a velocity of v. As the beam scanned, the powder melted, fused, and solidified at a rapid cooling rate; the interval between two adjacent scan tracks is called the hatch spacing of h. After completing the programmed path for the current layer of powder, a roller restacked the new powder on top of the current layer to form a new layer of powder, and the previous scanning operation was replicated, with the scan path typically requiring a rotation angle of θ. These steps would be repeated many times until the designed specimen was finally 3D printed.
Figure 1b depicts an additively manufactured (AMed) titanium alloy of Ti-6Al-4V [16], which is an α + β type, via laser PBF technique (L-PBF) with different orientations of 0° (horizontally printed), 45°, and 90° (vertically printed). Ti-6Al-4V is the most used titanium alloy [1,2] and one of the few metallic materials suitable for AM [3,4]. Given the unique microstructure produced by the rapid cooling of the AM process, the AMed Ti-6Al-4V is very easy to make at the ultimate tensile strength (UTS) of σu > 1100 MPa, and can provide access to the category of so-called high-strength titanium alloys [17]. For the conventional melting–forging process, the manufactured high-strength titanium alloys have almost always been preferred to the use of a metastable β type [17].
Nevertheless, the AM process may also cause unavoidable metallurgical defects [18], e.g., lack-of-fusion (LoF), gas pores, keyholing pores, and other AM pores. These AM defects will greatly deteriorate the microstructural integrity of AMed materials and significantly reduce their fatigue strengths, particularly for the cases of loading number N > 107 cycles. It should be noted that fatigue strength is one of the most important mechanical properties of structural materials in real-world practical applications [19,20,21], as fatigue loading is ubiquitous and causes the vast majority of engineering failures, estimated at 4% GDP loss [22].
Figure 2 presents an example [23], in which a batch of pre-alloyed Ti-6Al-4V powder was used to vertically print axisymmetric specimens via L-PBF with ten combinations of processing parameters and a heat treatment of stress relief by heating at 600 °C for 2 h then cooling in a vacuum furnace. These combinations were named as Group 1, Group 2, …, Group 10. Figure 2a shows the tensile properties of the yield strength σy, the UTS σu, and the total elongation of εt at fracture under quasi-static monotonic loading; Figure 2b shows the fatigue strengths of σw7 at 107 cycles, i.e., the traditional fatigue limit [24,25], and σw8 at 108 cycles under axially ultrasonic cycling with resonant frequency of 20 k ± 500 Hz at stress ratio of R = −1. In Figure 2, the abscissa E = p/(tvh) is the volumetric energy density of the movable power source [26].

2. Aim and Objectives

Because of its importance in engineering, as mentioned above, metal fatigue [27,28] has been studied for a long time, dating back to the pioneering work of Wöhler [29] in the mid-19th century. According to conventional knowledge [19,24,27], there is a distinct fatigue limit for some metallic materials, such as ferrous alloys and titanium alloys. The fatigue limit is a level of stress amplitude σa or maximum stress σmax below which an infinite number of loading cycles can be applied to a material without causing fatigue failure [19,24,25,27,28,30,31]. In engineering [32], the number of loading cycles is usually set at 107, and in this case, the fatigue limit is called the traditional fatigue limit [19,24,27].
Forty years ago, Atrens et al. [33] reported that fatigue failure still occurs after 107 cycles in a titanium alloy. This failure phenomenon has been named superlong [34,35] or ultralong [28] life fatigue, gigacycle fatigue [25,36], and ultra- [37] or very-high-cycle fatigue (VHCF) [38,39,40] successively. With the development of modern civilization, there is an urgent need for service components [41,42,43] that require a longer safe life, e.g., due to the high-frequency effects of flutter, many critical components in the aerospace industry can accumulate 107 cyclic loads every 3 h, including turbine engine fans and compressor blades. Therefore, the VHCF of titanium alloys, specifically Ti-6Al-4V, produced by conventional [39,43,44,45] and additive manufacturing [46,47,48,49,50], has attracted increasing attention in both scientific and industrial communities.
The authors and co-workers have systematically investigated the VHCF behavior of AMed Ti-6Al-4V and obtained extensive experimental results, which will be further discussed in-depth below. Based on these results, and with reference to the literature, this paper presents a research viewpoint to clarify the material characteristics, e.g., porosity, metallurgical defect types, and the microstructure of AMed Ti-6Al-4V, to summarize the main factors that will degrade the VHCF strengths, and to propose the applicable methods that will improve the VHCF performance.

3. Additively Manufactured Titanium Alloys

3.1. Porosities and Metallurgical Defect Types

Although the heat treatments of annealing types may degrade the tensile strength of AMed Ti-6Al-4V [49,50], the majority of the obtained UTS values in Figure 2a still satisfy σu > 1100 MPa. In contrast, the greatest of the fatigue strengths σw7 and σw8 does not exceed 300 MPa. Obviously, even if the applied stress amplitude σa is less than the traditional fatigue limit of σw7, the fatigue failure will occur during N > 107 cycles as long as σa > σw8. This falls into the scope of very-high-cycle fatigue (VHCF) [34,35,36,37,38,39,40].
In this regard, Du et al. [23] sequentially used the methods of Archimedean drainage and cross section to measure the porosity RD of the AMed specimens for Groups 1~10. Figure 3 exhibits the distributed AM defects for Groups 1~9 on the selected representative regions within the horizontal and longitudinal cross sections cut from their specimens under optical microscopy (OM). The measured porosities were displayed on Figure 4 with different abscissas. Generally, as the energy density E increases, the porosity decreases to a minimum value in Group 10 and then rebounds slightly to Group 7. As shown in Figure 3, the metallurgical defects are remarkably diverse, and their shapes become more and more irregular with increasing porosity. In comparison with Figure 2a and Figure 4b, the tensile quantities of σy, σu, and εt basically have an opposite trend to the porosity with varying E values. At last, Figure 4c enumerates the detail L-PBF parameters of Groups 1~10 for AMed Ti-6Al-4V.

3.2. Basic Features of 3D Printed Microstructures

Figure 5 presents the typical OM microstructure of AMed titanium alloys via L-PBF [16,51]. Figure 5a has an almost equiaxed microstructure (EM) of prior β grains on the cross section perpendicular to the building direction, and Figure 5b has almost columnar prior β grains on the cross section parallel to the building direction. Within the grain boundary, depicted with dashes in Figure 5, the prior β phase has transformed to the lamellae of α and β, which constitutes lamellar microstructure (LM). The neighboring lamellae with a similar crystallographic orientation have stacked one by one to form an LM colony. Along the building direction, many LM colonies have piled up to a columnar grain of the prior β phase.
Figure 5c–h is for an AMed Ti-6Al-4V with different orientations of 0°, 45°, and 90° [16] by using another combination of PBF parameters and after heat treatment of an annealing, named Group 11. Their OM images show the microstructures on the cross sections perpendicular to the oriented specimen axes at low and high magnification. As the angle of orientation increases from 0° to 90°, a global EM morphology gradually emerges on the cross sections from Figure 5c with blurred domains to Figure 5e with clear grains of prior β. For the enlarged OM images of Figure 5f–h, within the LM domains, there do not appear to be any significant differences in the cross sections for the oriented specimens, except for the presence of coarsened lamellar grains.
According to the traditional classification [1,2] of microstructural morphologies for the α + β typed titanium alloys, there are four basic microstructures: (1) EM of equiaxed α grains and transformed β domains [52], (2) LM of lamellar α and β grains [53], (3) bimodal microstructure (BM) of equiaxed α grains and LM domains [54], (4) basket weave (BW) microstructure of lamellar α and β grains with irregular orientations. Figure 5f–h shows an example of OM images for the BW microstructure. These four microstructures can be obtained by many specific thermal–mechanical processing procedures.

3.3. Thermal–Mechanical Evolution of Defect and Microstructure

One of the major advantages of AM is the ease with which printed specimens with complex configurations can be manufactured, but that also limits the possibility of further mechanical processing. For example, the complex shapes cannot be rolled, forged, stamped and so forth [55]. This leaves hot isostatic pressing (HIP) as the most popular method of thermal–mechanical processing for the AMed specimens.
In the HIP process, the specimens are simultaneously subjected to both high temperatures and high isostatic pressures using a gaseous transfer medium. The main factor that distinguishes HIP from other processing techniques is the use of gas as a pressure transfer medium to induce equivalent changes in three dimensions in the material it surrounds. For a successful HIP, three variables must be properly controlled: temperature, pressure, and time [56].
Figure 6 and Figure 7 give an example to describe the effect of HIP on the AMed microstructure and metallurgical defects of the specimen. Chi et al. [57,58] vertically printed two batches of specimens for an AMed Ti-6Al-4V via L-PBF, which were subsequently heat-treated for 2 h at 710 °C in a vacuum and then cooled in an argon atmosphere. This parameter combination of the PBF processing and the annealing was named as Group 12, in which one batch was selected to further post-treat with a HIP at 920 °C and 1000 bar for 2 h in argon atmosphere. As a control group, the other batch of specimens has no post processing. Figure 6 shows a characterization of electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) for a very local region around an AM defect on a cross section cut from these specimens of Group 12 without HIP. No difference was observed in the local microstructure of the defect edges from that of the LM or BW matrix. Figure 7 gives a visual comparison of the EBSD morphologies for the AMed matrix after the heat treatment (Group 12) and then with (Figure 7a,b) or without (Figure 7c,d) this HIP treat.
In general, the main purpose of HIP is focused on the effectiveness in eliminating the void-types of metallurgical defects, and the side effect is equivalent to performing additional heat treatment, which will coarsen the AMed microstructure. For Group 12, along the building direction, the tensile properties of the specimens without HIP [57] are σy = 951 MPa and σu = 1007 MPa, and the elongation is about 14% at fracture. Comparatively, the specimens with HIP [58] are σy = 849 MPa, σu = 946 MPa, and a longer elongation. This is attributed to the additional annealing of the HIP, i.e., at 920 °C for 2 h.

4. Fatigue Behaviors in High-Cycle and Very-High-Cycle Regimes

4.1. S-N Data and Curves

Figure 8 shows S-N data and curves for AMed Ti-6Al-4V alloys via L-PBF with different combinations of processing parameters, heat treatments, surface states, and building orientations. The abscissa is the failure cycle Nf, and the ordinate is the applied stress amplitude σa. All fatigue tests were conducted at room temperature and in ambient air by axial cycling at an ultrasonic frequency of 20 k ± 500 Hz.
Figure 8a is for the combinations of Groups 1~10 under stress ratios R = −1 [23]. The fatigue specimens of Groups 1~10 were vertically printed to hourglass shapes; after heat treatment, the specimens were ground and polished to the final dimensions [23,51]. Figure 8b is for vertically printed specimens with a combination Group 13 of L-PBF parameters of p = 325 W, t = 0.03 mm, v = 1300 mm/s, h = 0.12 mm, and E = 69.44 J/mm3 [59], then stress relieved by heating at 600 °C for 2 h. Along the building direction, the Vickers hardness is 367 HV, and σy = 1068 MPa, σu = 1202 MPa. The fatigue specimens were divided into two batches: one retained the directly printed rough surface, called As-built, and the other had a polished surface, called Polished. Figure 8c is for Group 11 [16]. The fatigue specimens were printed with orientations of 0°, 45°, and 90°, and the tensile properties along these orientations were not reported in Ref. [16].

4.2. Specimens with Different Surface States

The S-N curve of As-built specimens for Group 13 has a slope in a high-cycle regime (N < 107 cycles) and a horizontal asymptote at a negative stress ratio of R = −1. All specimens failed by high-cycle fatigue (HCF, Nf < 107 cycles) while σa > 80 MPa and either failed in the HCF stage or survived beyond 109 cycles while σa < 80 MPa. No VHCF occurs.
The S-N curve of Polished specimens for Group 13 has two slopes in high-cycle and very-high-cycle regimes, respectively, at R = −1, and changes to a single slope from HCF to VHCF at R = 0.7. The fatigue strengths at 107 cycles are σa7 = 130 MPa at R = −1 and σa7 = 80 MPa at R = 0.7. VHCF can occur at both stress ratios of R = −1 and 0.7.
For Group 13, Figure 9a,b of OM images presents the AM defect distributions on the horizontal cross sections of As-built and Polished specimens with metallographic etching. There is a defect-enriched layer with an offset distance T inward from the surface for both As-built and Polished specimens due to different AM strategies for surface and inner filling, as shown in Figure 1a. Figure 9c–f shows the representative morphologies of fatigue fracture surfaces imaged by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Figure 9c,d is for HCF of As-built specimens, in which fatigue failure was induced by cooperative interactions of directly printed rough surface and subsurface-enriched defects. Figure 9e,f gives an example of VHCF for Polished specimens; the enriched subsurface defects still appeared on the fracture surface, as shown in Figure 9e, and the final failure originated from a subsurface defect, as shown in Figure 9f.
It should be noted that although the fatigue cracks lead to the final failure initiated from the edge of the subsurface defect, this does not indicate that the failure type of the AMed specimens can be classified as a surface one. In fact, the classification of failure types should be based on the overall macroscopic fractography rather than on some local fracture characteristics [60].

4.3. Specimens with Different Processing Parameters

For Groups 1~10 of different L-PBF parameters, in Figure 8a, the hollow and solid symbols represent fatigue failure induced by surface and internal crack initiation. Fatigue performances are optimized with decreasing porosity of Groups 1~10, and single S-N characteristics become duplex or stepwise at a negative stress ratio of R = −1. The fatigue strength at 107 cycles from σa7 = 75 MPa is enhanced to 300 MPa. Figure 10 demonstrates typical morphologies of fatigue crack initiation for different failure types. Figure 10a,b depict SEM images for HCF induced by specimen surface and a surface defect, respectively. Figure 10c depicts an SEM image for VHCF induced by an irregular void-typed defect at the specimen subsurface caused by the AM process. Figure 10d schematically draws the possible formation process of this AM defect. Figure 10e,f of SEM images is for VHCF induced by subsurface AM defects with different shapes or types.
Figure 9a,b also presents an EM of prior β grains distributed on the cross sections perpendicular to the building direction. Their equivalent diameters are in the same order of magnitude as the transverse dimensions of columnar grains as dashed in Figure 5a,b. Consequently, the yield strength and UTS of As-built and Polished specimens for Group 13 are close to those for Group 10. However, their fatigue performance varies greatly in both HCF and VHCF regimes. The fatigue strength of As-built specimens is only comparable to that of specimens for Group 3 with the highest porosity in HCF and VHCF regimes. The HCF strength of Polished specimens is between those of specimens with the second and third highest porosity for Groups 2 and 8, and the VHCF strength is even lower than the latter two. This indicates that the weakening of fatigue strength, especially in the VHCF regime, is attributed, firstly, to the directly printed rough surface and, secondly, to the subsurface-enriched defects in the AMed specimens of titanium alloys.

4.4. Internal Crack Initiation with Different Building Orientations

For Group 11 with orientations 0°, 45°, and 90°, the fatigue specimens were coaxially machined from the heat-treated round bars of AMed Ti-6Al-4V and then ground to the final hourglass shapes. In the range of 200 MPa ≤ σa ≤ 500 MPa, all specimens failed by internal crack initiation in HCF and VHCF regimes regardless of failure cycles. The S-N curves show continuously decreasing slopes with low data scatter. Basically, the specimens with 0° orientation had the best fatigue resistance, followed by 45° and 90°, although the differences in their values are inconsiderable.
Figure 11 provides the representative SEM morphologies of crack initiation for these specimens, in which the main cracks originated from the AM defects at the specimen interior. There appears to be a certain orientation relationship between these critical AM defects that lead to the ultimate fatigue fracture. The AM defect in Figure 11a can be tilted 45° to obtain the defect in Figure 11b and then tilted a further 45° to obtain the defect in Figure 11c. They also seem to be interpreted by Figure 10d. Figure 11d–f give alternative situations for other metallurgical defects with different shapes or AM types.
The AM defects in Group 11 have projected areas on the fracture surfaces of about the same order of magnitude as those in Group 1, as shown in Figure 10e. In comparison to the crack initiation behaviors mentioned above, the location of fatigue origin tends to be the specimen interior (Group 11) rather than on the directly printed rough surface, polished surface, subsurface-enriched defects (As-built and Polished specimens of Group 13), or other subsurface defects (Group 1~10) as the depth of the layer removed from the specimen surface increases. As a result, the fatigue resistance of Group 11 is much better than that of Groups 1~10 and 13. Even for Group 10, which has the lowest porosity, its HCF resistance is significantly lower than that of Group 11.

5. Effect of Stress Ratio on Fatigue Strength and Fractography

5.1. S-N Data with Various Stress Ratios

Fu et al. [61] vertically printed a batch of round bars for an AMed Ti-6Al-4V by using L-PBF with the same parameters of processing and heat treatment as Group 13. The porosity is 2.93%, and the tensile properties are σy = 1191 MPa, 1246 MPa, and εt = 5.6% along the building direction. The fatigue specimens were coaxially machined from the round bars, then ground and polished to hourglass shapes for ultrasonic push–pull and pull–pull cycling at a loading frequency of 20 k ± 500 Hz in ambient air and at room temperature. These specimens were named as Group 14.
Figure 12 shows the S-N data in terms of the applied maximum stress σmax for the AMed Ti-6Al-4V alloys with different L-PBF processing and heat treatments of Groups 10 (Figure 12a), 14 (Figure 12b) and 12 (Figure 12c) under various stress ratios of R = −1, −0.5, 0.1, 0.2 and 0.5.
For Group 10 of Figure 12a, in the range of 300 MPa ≤ σmax ≤ 800 MPa, the S-N data exhibit a continuous decreasing shape for the failure life from 105 to 109 cycles. While σmax > 500 MPa, two specimens were tested and failed by surface crack initiation-induced HCF; while σmax < 500 MPa, six specimens were tested; one ran out, and others failed by internal crack initiation-induced VHCF. At σmax = 500 MPa, two specimens were tested, one failed by surface crack-induced HCF and the other by internal crack-induced VHCF.

5.2. Crack Initiation Morphologies for Case-I

For Group 14 of Figure 12b, the fatigue resistance in terms of maximum stress first decreases and then increases as the stress ratio of the R value increases. For R = −1, −0.5, 0.1, and 0.5, the specimens under R = 0.5 have the highest σmax, R = −1 the second, R = 0.1 the third, and R = −0.5 the lowest. All fatigue specimens that failed in the VHCF regime were classified as internal crack initiation.
While R = −1, 25 specimens were tested, two ran out of 109 cycles, 21 failed by internal crack initiation-induced VHCF or HCF, and only one failed by surface crack initiation-induced fatigue failure at Nf = 3 × 105 cycles under σmax > 300 MPa, which has the shortest Nf and the highest σmax. While R = −0.5, thirteen specimens were tested, one ran out of 109 cycles at σmax < 100 MPa, and the other twelve failed in HCF or VHCF regime caused by internal crack initiation in the range of 100 MPa < σmax < 250 MPa. While R = 0.1, 11 specimens were tested, and all fatigue failed by internal crack initiation in HCF and VHCF from 2 × 105 to 5 × 108 cycles, regardless of failure life. While R = 0.5, twenty-four specimens were tested, one ran out of 109 cycles at σmax = 200 MPa, and the others preferred (18/19) internal crack initiation in the range of 300 MPa < σmax < 400 MPa.
Figure 13a–l offers representative SEM images of crack initiation and growth morphologies on the fracture surface for selected specimens that failed in different fatigue regimes and stress ratios. In these subfigures, the crack that leads to the final fatigue failure was originated from an AM defect, which was yellow dashed and marked as LOF. To be exact, the defect is not LoF but a type of AM pore that Fu et al. [61] had mislabeled.
For the negative stress ratios of R = −1 and −0.5, a crack initiation region of rough area (RA) incubates, nucleates, and matures at Nf > 108 cycles as the fatigue life grows around the AM defect. The RA regions are circular or elliptical in shape and tangent to the specimen surfaces, as shown in Figure 13c,f. As the stress ratio increases to R = 0.1, a large RA region can be formed at 107 cycles < Nf < 108 cycles, as shown in Figure 13h, the boundary of which is not tangent to the specimen surface and the projected area of which is even larger than the RA at Nf > 108 cycles as shown in Figure 13i. While the stress ratio further increases to R = 0.5, around the dominating AM defect, which causes the final failure, no identifiable RA region was observed on the fracture surface even at Nf > 108 cycles, as shown in Figure 13j–l. This crack initiation behavior with the RA region is quite similar to that with the fine granular area (FGA, [62]) in high-strength steels under negative and positive R values [63].

5.3. Crack Initiation Morphologies for Case-II

For Group 10 of the AMed Ti-6Al-4V, Figure 14 displays the typical SEM images for crack initiation in HCF and VHCF under negative and positive stress ratios of R = −1 and 0.5. Figure 14a is for surface crack initiation-induced HCF, which originated from a surface AM defect. Figure 14b,c is for internal crack initiation-induced VHCF at R = −1, which originated from a subsurface AM defect and encircled by an RA region with granular morphology. Figure 14d–i gives two examples showing the whole fracture surface (Figure 14d,g) and the detailed region of fatigue crack initiation and early propagation, which originated from an internal AM defect and cracking of a leaf-like facet (Figure 14e,f,h,i) for failure lives of 107 and 108 cycles at R = 0.5. Obviously, for a positive stress ratio of R = 0.5, the crack initiation morphologies of Group 10, as shown in Figure 14d–i, are very different from those of Group 14, as shown in Figure 13k,l, which is defined as Case-I. In contrast, the former case of fatigue crack initiation for Group 10 is defined as Case-II.
In Figure 14, the red bars of P1, P2, P3, P4, and P5 locate the lamellae for further characterization of the profile microstructure underneath the fracture surface by using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The lamellae were cut from the representative locations on the fracture surfaces with the milling of a focused ion beam (FIB). P1 is for a core region around a surface AM defect of crack initiation experienced HCF at R = −1; P2 and P3 are for locations near and away from the crack initiation site of a subsurface AM defect experienced VHCF at R = −1; P2 is within the RA region and P3 outs; P4 and P5 are for locations near the internal AM defect of crack initiation experienced VHCF at R = 0.5; P4 is within the facet; and P5 is outs but adjacent. The microstructures on TEM lamellae of P1, P3, P4, and P5 almost keep the original AMed LM or BW with coarse grains of α and β phases. On top of the TEM lamella of P2, there is a nanograin layer [51] with a heterogeneous refined microstructure [64] of twisted lamellar α/β grains and equiaxed grains, which may be produced by recrystallization.
Similar phenomena of nanograin formation and microstructure refinement can also occur in other metallic materials, whether conventional manufacturing [63,65,66,67,68] or AM [15,61,69]. Hong et al. [63] proposed a model of numerous cyclic pressing (NCP) to explain these phenomena, in which fracture surface nanocrystallization occurs and is associated with VHCF initiation under negative stress ratios due to a very long process (N > 107 cycles) of repeated crack opening and closing. This process can assume and store a massive amount of cyclic strain energy, which is introduced by the applied stress amplitude, thus allowing the material to have a relatively high σa value. The key to the NCP model is a sufficient number of load cycles and a sufficiently high value of the compressive stress component.

5.4. Fatigue Strength Estimation under Tensile Mean Stress

Figure 15 of Haigh diagrams [70] quantitatively delineates the effect of tensile mean stress or stress ratio on the fatigue resistance of an AMed Ti-6Al-4V alloy in comparison of high-strength steels and titanium alloys with several microstructures based on the relations of Goodman [71], Gerber [72] and Pan et al. [65]. Figure 15a,b is for the AMed titanium alloy of Group 14 [61] in the HCF and VHCF regime, respectively. Figure 15c is for the VHCF limit of high-strength steel [73]. Figure 15d,e is for a Ti-6Al-4V alloy with EM [74] in HCF and VHCF regimes, respectively. Figure 15f is for the VHCF limit of titanium alloys with LM, BM, or EM.
For both HCF and VHCF regimes, the fatigue strength of the AMed titanium alloy degrades sharply from the stress ratio of R = −1 to 0.5, worse than that of a mill-annealed titanium alloy with EM [74]. We noticed that the AMed alloys and high-strength steels have many similarities [75], e.g., the nonmetallic inclusions [76,77] in high-strength steels play a similar role in inducing fatigue crack initiation and early growth, as do the AM defects in AMed alloys. Sakai et al. [73] proposed a bilinear model to describe the stress ratio effect on the VHCF limit of σa with varying mean stress σm in high-strength steel. Following the analogy of inclusions and AM defects, this model can be transferred to AMed alloys from high-strength steel.
The AMed titanium alloy is often with a microstructure of LM or BW. For the conventionally manufactured titanium alloys, Figure 15d–f depicts how microstructure affects the effect of tensile mean stress σm and stress ratio R on fatigue strength. For the EM, HCF and VHCF strengths deteriorate with increasing σm in accordance with a Goodman line and Pan et al. [65,74]’s under-convex curve, respectively. On the “true” fatigue limit [30,31] beyond 109 cycles, crack initiation in an LM domain [53] abides by a Gerber up-convex curve, and the BM [54] follows a Goodman line, which can be regarded as a mixed microstructure of LM and EM.

6. Discussion of Promising Methods to Improve Fatigue Property

6.1. Influences of Heat Treatment and Hot Isostatic Pressing

Figure 16a presents S-N data and curves for Ti-6Al-4V alloys with a BM [78] and several AMed microstructures [79] subjected to HCF and VHCF with axial cycling at an ultrasonic frequency of 20 [78] and 19 kHz [79] under R = −1 at room temperature and in ambient air. The BM has tensile properties of σy = 920 MPa, σu = 1010 MPa, and εt = 17.5%, named Heinz [78]. An AMed Ti-6Al-4V was produced via L-PBF with processing parameters of p = 175 W, t = 0.03 mm, v = 710 mm/s, h = 0.12 mm, and E = 68.47 J/mm3 by using a SLM (selective laser melting) 250HL system to obtain a batch of raw cylinders. Then, the cylinders were divided into two groups: one named SLM-1b, which was heat treated at 800 °C for 2 h in argon atmosphere, and the other named SLM-2, which was HIP treated at 920 °C for 2 h at 1000 bar in an argon atmosphere. The other AMed Ti-6Al-4V was produced via an electron beam PBF (EB-PBF)—also called an electron beam melting (EBM) [80]—with processing parameters of acceleration voltage 60 kV, maximum current 21 mA, t = 0.05 mm, v = 4530 mm/s, h = 0.1 mm. An Arcam A2X system is used to obtain a batch of raw cylinders without any post-treatment. This batch was designated EBM. All specimens of the AMed Ti-6Al-4V alloys were machined from the raw cylinders by turning along the building direction.
In the range of 400 MPa < σa < 700 MPa, the conventionally manufactured Ti-6Al-4V with BM of Heinz [78] maintains the maximum HCF and VHCF strengths than SLM-2, EBM, and SLM-1b; The HCF and VHCF strengths for HIP specimens of SLM-2 are the second for the corresponding range of 400 MPa < σa < 600 MPa; EBM and SLM-1b are the third and the minimum in the range of 250 MPa < σa < 450 MPa. In the VHCF regime, fatigue damage preferentially initiates from internal defect, and S-N data and curves can be easily categorized into two groups, from high to low-stress amplitude of σa and from long to short fatigue life of Nf. The VHCF resistance of SLM-2 is slightly less than that of the BM; they both greatly exceed that of EBM and SLM-1b, and the resistance of SLM-1b is also slightly less than that of EBM. In the HCF regime, fatigue damage preferentially initiates from surface defect, and S-N data can be categorized into four groups: the BM, SLM-2, EBM, and SLM-1b from high to low-stress amplitude of σa, and from long to short fatigue life of Nf.
It is easy to see that HIP significantly improves the fatigue properties of AMed titanium alloys, especially in VHCF. This improvement can be attributed to two factors: the coarsening of AMed microstructure and the elimination of void-typed defects.
For AMed Ti-6Al-4V, annealing can also produce a coarsened LM or BW microstructure, which enhances the ductility by reducing the tensile strength. Groups 10, 12, and 14 give examples. Group 14 has the optimum fatigue performance and the best tensile plasticity. In fact, due to the presence of void-typed AM defects, the fatigue strength is strongly dependent on some quantities of fatigue short or long crack growth [81,82], similar to fracture toughness, which is more appropriately related to local plasticity [83] and can be directly assessed by tensile strength and ductility.

6.2. Competitions among Metallurgical and Artificial Defects

Chi et al. [58] investigated the HCF and VHCF behaviors of smooth specimens and the specimens with artificial defects for an AMed Ti-6Al-4V of Group 12 without and with a HIP treatment, as shown in Figure 16b,c. All fatigue specimens were tested, at room temperature and in air, by ultrasonic axial cycling at a loading frequency of 20 k ± 500 Hz with a stress ratio of R = −1.
For specimens without HIP, in the range of 500 MPa ≤ σa ≤ 600 MPa, fatigue cracks tend to nucleate from the edges of the artificial surface defects for 1 × 105 cycles ≤ Nf ≤ 3 × 105 cycles, and from the AM defects at specimen interior for 3 × 106 cycles ≤ Nf ≤ 5 × 107 cycles. While σa < 500 MPa, all failed specimens were internally cracked by interior AM defects inducing VHCF, despite specimens with or without artificial defects.
For specimens with HIP, the smooth specimens perform very well in both HCF and VHCF regimes. While σa > 700 MPa, two specimens were tested, and all failed by surface crack initiation; one failed at about Nf = 2 × 106 cycles, and the other failed at about Nf = 2 × 107 cycles. In the range of 600 MPa < σa < 700 MPa, seven specimens were tested; two ran out of 109 cycles, the other five failed by internal crack initiation inducing VHCF, and Figure 16d gives an SEM example for the fracture surface. Simultaneously, all specimens with artificial defects failed in the HCF regime, no VHCF occurred, and the fatigue cracks all originated from the drilled holes on specimen surfaces, as shown in Figure 16e–g, which were named Defect-A, Defect-B, and Defect-C.
In Figure 16d, a crack initiation area with a rough fracture surface was identified as a dashed ellipse, which had been mislabeled FGA by Chi et al. [58], and the correct name should be RA. Within the RA region, no AM defect of the void types can be determined on the fracture surface. In Figure 16e–g, around the artificial defects, there is no discernible region of crack initiation and early growth.
Attributed to the presence of artificial defects, the fatigue strength of the drilled specimens is significantly lower than that of the smooth specimens and continues to decrease as the defect size increases. The VHCF limit at 109 cycles was measured as σa = 625 MPa for the smooth specimens, σa = 490 MPa for specimens with Defect-A, σa = 460 MPa for Defect-B, and σa = 380 MPa for Defect-C. For the smooth specimens of Group 12 with HIP, the fatigue performance is even better than the BM without any AM defects which is produced by conventional manufacturing.

6.3. Roles of Microstructure, Local Plastiticity, Tensile Strength and Ductility

It is very reasonable that the fatigue behavior of AMed materials can be modulated by adjusting the defect size [84,85]. This is exactly the same as for high-strength steels, except that the AM defects [15,18] were replaced by the nonmetallic inclusions [28] or other inhomogeneities [86,87,88] and can be easily described by Kitagawa-Takahashi diagrams [89].
For the AMed microstructure of Group 12 with HIP treatment, fatigue crack initiation occurs from the matrix and sustains a VHCF limit of σa = 625 MPa in the absence of void-typed AM defects and other artificial defects. Even if an AM defect with an equivalent size of Defect-C exists in the specimen interior, the AMed matrix with HIP still can endure a VHCF limit of σa = 380 MPa, which is greater than that of the AMed Ti-6Al-4V of Groups 1~11, 13 and 14 without HIP treatment. This is because the additional annealing introduced by HIP actually coarsens the AMed microstructure.
As mentioned in Section 6.1, the coarsening of AMed microstructure also plays a key role in fatigue performance, especially in very-high-cycle regimes. It is noted that, for materials with void-typed defects, coarsening of the microstructure is not required, and simply increasing the local plasticity of the defect edges can make a substantial improvement in fatigue properties.
For titanium alloys, the local plasticity depends on the local microstructure and can be enhanced by methods of microstructural design [52,54,90,91,92,93,94,95], e.g., tension [52], torsion [92] and compression with or without recrystallization annealing. This method is not only applicable to the symmetrically cyclic tension and compression (R = −1) but may also be applied to a wider range of working conditions. Specifically, the VHCF crack initiation in the LM domain [53] with increasing tensile mean stress approximately obeys a Gerber relation for −1 < R ≤ 0.5 [54], which is consistent with the case in AMed aluminum alloys [96,97]. In the result of Du et al. [51], the AM defect causes the surrounding LM domain cleavage to form a lamellar facet as the VHCF origin and leads to the final fatigue fracture at R = 0.5. Therefore, we can shield the AM defect itself by regulating the microstructure around the AM defect to optimally dominate the VHCF behavior of the AMed materials at R > −1.
We can utilize the micro and/or nano tests, such as microhardness and nanoindentation [98,99,100], to provide a better assessment of the local microstructure and plasticity. However, it is always difficult to acquire detailed information on local microstructure and plasticity around the AM defects, so we also often use global quantities to estimate the potential fatigue resistance of AMed Titanium alloys. Tensile strength and ductility are the most popularly used global quantities for structural materials.
Figure 17 displays the several tensile curves of engineering stress versus engineering strain under quasi-static monotonic loading of titanium alloys produced by methods of AM and conventional manufacturing. The tensile properties rely mainly on the global microstructure rather than the distribution of metallurgical defects when the porosity is not very large. As shown in Figure 17a, in comparison with a titanium alloy with EM of equiaxed (α + β), the microstructure of acicular α’ martensite makes a higher strength and a lower plasticity. After an annealing, the martensite will transform to a microstructure of coarse lamellar (α + β) with a downgraded strength and upgraded ductility. Xu et al. [101] tailored the microstructure of ultrafine lamellar (α + β) to simultaneously achieve superior tensile properties of AMed Ti-6Al-4V than the conventional one. Chong et al. [102] developed a technique of rapid heat treatment that can globally enhance the tensile strength and ductility of a Ti-6Al-4V with fully martensitic microstructures, as shown in Figure 17b. More recently, Qu et al. [103] used HIP treatment to remove void-typed defects, followed by heat treatment to modulate the microstructure, and claim to have achieved the highest HCF strength to date. This is an example of the potential viability of this approach.

7. Summary and Perspectives

In this paper, based on our previous works, we have reviewed the characteristics of additively manufactured (AMed) Ti-6Al-4V alloys and the current status of fatigue research in the high-cycle and very-high-cycle regimes, as shown in Table 1, to summarize and rank the main factors affecting fatigue properties and discuss the effect of stress ratio on fatigue strength and fractography.
By using AM, AMed titanium alloys can easily achieve high-strengths, even for the commercially used Ti-6Al-4V, an α + β type, whereas metastable β types are required by conventional methods. For optimized AM parameters, the directly printed state has the highest strength and not optimal plasticity. In very-high-cycle regimes, fatigue strength is related to both tensile strength and ductility. If the AM parameters are not optimized, the primary factor influencing fatigue performance is porosity, which tends to be a high value. When the porosity is relatively low, surface roughness, e.g., the as-built specimen surface, becomes an important influence, followed by the maximum size of metallurgical defects on the projection plane perpendicular to the loading direction. These factors are also dependent on plasticity, and their influence decreases as ductility increases. As a result, the AMed titanium alloys often exhibit higher values of very-high-cycle fatigue strength after an equivalent annealing of thermal–mechanical treatments than the directly printed state. However, annealing will inevitably reduce the strength of the AMed material, which in turn will reduce its fatigue strength. In this way, the trade-off relationship between strength and plasticity can be reproduced to very-high-cycle fatigue. Therefore, those methods that can simultaneously improve the strength and plasticity of titanium alloys also hold promise for improving very-high-cycle fatigue strength.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, X.P.; Data curation, R.F., L.D. and X.P; Investigation, C.G., Y.Z., J.J. and X.P.; Methodology, X.P.; Project administration, C.G. and X.P.; Resources, R.F., L.D. and X.P.; Supervision, C.G., Y.Z., J.J. and X.P.; Visualization, X.P.; Writing—original draft, C.G., Y.Z. and X.P.; Writing—review and editing, X.P. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by Youth Doctoral Fundation Project of Harbin University, grant number HUDF2021106.

Acknowledgments

C.G. is very grateful to Harbin University for the financial support.

Conflicts of Interest

Author Yang Zhang was employed by the company China Construction Sixth Engineering Division Co., Ltd. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. (a) Schematic drawing for powder bed fusion (PBF) with a scan strategy of meandering paths [15]. (b) The 3D printed specimens [16] with orientations of 0°, 45°, and 90°.
Figure 1. (a) Schematic drawing for powder bed fusion (PBF) with a scan strategy of meandering paths [15]. (b) The 3D printed specimens [16] with orientations of 0°, 45°, and 90°.
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Figure 2. Tensile (a) and fatigue (b) properties of a titanium alloy with Groups 1~10 of processing parameters via laser powder bed fusion and experienced through annealing [23]. σy: yield strength, σu: ultimate tensile strength, εt: total elongation at fracture; σw7: fatigue strength at 107 cycles, σw8: fatigue strength at 108 cycles; solid symbols denoting Groups 1~9, and hollows denoting Group 10.
Figure 2. Tensile (a) and fatigue (b) properties of a titanium alloy with Groups 1~10 of processing parameters via laser powder bed fusion and experienced through annealing [23]. σy: yield strength, σu: ultimate tensile strength, εt: total elongation at fracture; σw7: fatigue strength at 107 cycles, σw8: fatigue strength at 108 cycles; solid symbols denoting Groups 1~9, and hollows denoting Group 10.
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Figure 3. Selected optical micrographs [23] showing metallurgical defect distributions on horizontal (a) and longitudinal (b) cross sections of specimens from Groups 1~9.
Figure 3. Selected optical micrographs [23] showing metallurgical defect distributions on horizontal (a) and longitudinal (b) cross sections of specimens from Groups 1~9.
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Figure 4. (a) Porosity versus specimen group. (b) Porosity versus volumetric energy density E. (c) Porosity versus laser power p, layer thickness t, scan speed v, and hatch spacing h; red numbers denote Groups 1~10 [23].
Figure 4. (a) Porosity versus specimen group. (b) Porosity versus volumetric energy density E. (c) Porosity versus laser power p, layer thickness t, scan speed v, and hatch spacing h; red numbers denote Groups 1~10 [23].
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Figure 5. Optical metallographic images [51] on horizontal (a) and longitudinal (b) cross sections of specimens from Group 10. Optical metallographic images [16] on cross sections perpendicular to the specimen axes for another additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V with different orientations of 0°, 45° and 90° at low magnification (ae) and at high magnification (fh).
Figure 5. Optical metallographic images [51] on horizontal (a) and longitudinal (b) cross sections of specimens from Group 10. Optical metallographic images [16] on cross sections perpendicular to the specimen axes for another additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V with different orientations of 0°, 45° and 90° at low magnification (ae) and at high magnification (fh).
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Figure 6. Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) for an additively manufactured titanium alloy with Group 12 of processing parameters via laser powder bed fusion and experienced through annealing [57]: (a) Phase map, yellow for α and cyan for β; (b) Inverse pole figure (IPF) showing crystallographic orientations of α and β grains. (c,d) enlarging boxes c and d in (a,b).
Figure 6. Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) for an additively manufactured titanium alloy with Group 12 of processing parameters via laser powder bed fusion and experienced through annealing [57]: (a) Phase map, yellow for α and cyan for β; (b) Inverse pole figure (IPF) showing crystallographic orientations of α and β grains. (c,d) enlarging boxes c and d in (a,b).
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Figure 7. Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) for specimens from Group 12 without (a,b) and with (c,d) a treatment of hot isostatic pressing (HIP) [58]: (a,c) Phase maps, red for α and green for β; (b,d) inverse pole figures (IPFs). The white scale bars all represent 20 μm.
Figure 7. Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) for specimens from Group 12 without (a,b) and with (c,d) a treatment of hot isostatic pressing (HIP) [58]: (a,c) Phase maps, red for α and green for β; (b,d) inverse pole figures (IPFs). The white scale bars all represent 20 μm.
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Figure 8. S-N data and curves in terms of stress amplitude: (a) Groups 1~10 at stress ratio R = −1 [23], hollow and solid symbols denoting surface and internal crack initiation, respectively; (b) Group 13 with different surface states at R = −1 and 0.7 [59]; (c) Group 11 with building orientations of 0°, 45°, and 90° [16]. Symbols with arrows represent runout specimens, solid or dashed lines correspond to the approximate fits for data points of the same colors.
Figure 8. S-N data and curves in terms of stress amplitude: (a) Groups 1~10 at stress ratio R = −1 [23], hollow and solid symbols denoting surface and internal crack initiation, respectively; (b) Group 13 with different surface states at R = −1 and 0.7 [59]; (c) Group 11 with building orientations of 0°, 45°, and 90° [16]. Symbols with arrows represent runout specimens, solid or dashed lines correspond to the approximate fits for data points of the same colors.
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Figure 9. Optical metallographic images on horizontal cross section of As-built (a) and Polished (b) specimens. Scanning electron micrographs for fatigue fracture surfaces of As-built (c,d) and Polished (e,f) specimens, (f) enlarging box in (e). (a) R = −1, σa = 139.1 MPa, Nf = 2.9 × 105 cycles; (b) R = −1, σa = 125.2 MPa, Nf = 4.3 × 105 cycles; (c) R = −1, σa = 153 MPa, Nf = 3.3 × 107 cycles [59].
Figure 9. Optical metallographic images on horizontal cross section of As-built (a) and Polished (b) specimens. Scanning electron micrographs for fatigue fracture surfaces of As-built (c,d) and Polished (e,f) specimens, (f) enlarging box in (e). (a) R = −1, σa = 139.1 MPa, Nf = 2.9 × 105 cycles; (b) R = −1, σa = 125.2 MPa, Nf = 4.3 × 105 cycles; (c) R = −1, σa = 153 MPa, Nf = 3.3 × 107 cycles [59].
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Figure 10. Typical morphologies for fatigue crack initiation at stress ratio R = −1: (a) Group 7, σa = 291 MPa, Nf = 6.95 × 105 cycles; (b) Group 5, σa = 175 MPa, Nf = 8.93 × 106 cycles; (c) Group 2, σa = 116 MPa, Nf = 1.56 × 108 cycles; (d) schematic of melting pools without overlap; (e) Group 1, σa = 174 MPa, Nf = 2.38 × 108 cycles; (f) Group 7, σa = 262 MPa, Nf = 1.28 × 108 cycles [23].
Figure 10. Typical morphologies for fatigue crack initiation at stress ratio R = −1: (a) Group 7, σa = 291 MPa, Nf = 6.95 × 105 cycles; (b) Group 5, σa = 175 MPa, Nf = 8.93 × 106 cycles; (c) Group 2, σa = 116 MPa, Nf = 1.56 × 108 cycles; (d) schematic of melting pools without overlap; (e) Group 1, σa = 174 MPa, Nf = 2.38 × 108 cycles; (f) Group 7, σa = 262 MPa, Nf = 1.28 × 108 cycles [23].
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Figure 11. Internal origins of fatigue crack initiation for specimens of Group 11 with orientations 0°, 45° and 90° at stress ratio R = −1: (a) 0°, σa = 400 MPa, Nf = 5.35 × 106 cycles; (b) 45°, σa = 225 MPa, Nf = 3.39 × 108 cycles; (c) 90°, σa = 350 MPa, Nf = 3.99 × 106 cycles; (d) 0°, σa = 300 MPa, Nf = 2.51 × 107 cycles; (e) 45°, σa = 400 MPa, Nf = 7.55 × 105 cycles; (f) 90°, σa = 320 MPa, Nf = 9.81 × 106 cycles [16].
Figure 11. Internal origins of fatigue crack initiation for specimens of Group 11 with orientations 0°, 45° and 90° at stress ratio R = −1: (a) 0°, σa = 400 MPa, Nf = 5.35 × 106 cycles; (b) 45°, σa = 225 MPa, Nf = 3.39 × 108 cycles; (c) 90°, σa = 350 MPa, Nf = 3.99 × 106 cycles; (d) 0°, σa = 300 MPa, Nf = 2.51 × 107 cycles; (e) 45°, σa = 400 MPa, Nf = 7.55 × 105 cycles; (f) 90°, σa = 320 MPa, Nf = 9.81 × 106 cycles [16].
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Figure 12. S-N data in terms of maximum stress for additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V alloys under negative and positive stress ratio R: (a) Group 10 at R = −1 and 0.5 [51]; (b) Group 14 at R = −1, −0.5, 0.1 and 0.5 [61]; (c) Group 12 at R = −1, 0.1 and 0.2 [57]. Sur: surface crack initiation-induced final fatigue failure; Int: internal crack initiation-induced final fatigue failure. Symbols with arrows representing runout specimens.
Figure 12. S-N data in terms of maximum stress for additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V alloys under negative and positive stress ratio R: (a) Group 10 at R = −1 and 0.5 [51]; (b) Group 14 at R = −1, −0.5, 0.1 and 0.5 [61]; (c) Group 12 at R = −1, 0.1 and 0.2 [57]. Sur: surface crack initiation-induced final fatigue failure; Int: internal crack initiation-induced final fatigue failure. Symbols with arrows representing runout specimens.
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Figure 13. Scanning electron micrographs showing crack initiation and growth regions of selected fatigue specimens (al) for Group 14 under different stress ratios and loading cycles. LOF: lack-of-fusion typed defect, RA: rough area of crack initiation region [61].
Figure 13. Scanning electron micrographs showing crack initiation and growth regions of selected fatigue specimens (al) for Group 14 under different stress ratios and loading cycles. LOF: lack-of-fusion typed defect, RA: rough area of crack initiation region [61].
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Figure 14. Typical morphologies of scanning electron microscopy for fatigue crack initiation and growth on fracture surfaces in high-cycle and very-high-cycle regimes under negative (ac) and positive (di) stress ratios. Red bars P1, P2, P3, P4, and P5 are locations of TEM (transmission electron microscopy) samples cut by FIB (focused ion beam) milling [51].
Figure 14. Typical morphologies of scanning electron microscopy for fatigue crack initiation and growth on fracture surfaces in high-cycle and very-high-cycle regimes under negative (ac) and positive (di) stress ratios. Red bars P1, P2, P3, P4, and P5 are locations of TEM (transmission electron microscopy) samples cut by FIB (focused ion beam) milling [51].
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Figure 15. Haigh diagrams for an additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V of Group 14 [61] for the following: (a) 1 × 106 cycles < Nf < 8 × 106 cycles; (b) 1 × 108 cycles < Nf < 7 × 108 cycles. (c) Haigh diagram for very-high-cycle fatigue limit of a high-strength steel [73]. Haigh diagrams for a titanium alloy [74] with equiaxed microstructure (EM) at (d) 107 cycles and (e) 109 cycles. (f) Haigh diagram for titanium alloys [54] with lamellar microstructure (LM), bimodal microstructure (BM), or EM.
Figure 15. Haigh diagrams for an additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V of Group 14 [61] for the following: (a) 1 × 106 cycles < Nf < 8 × 106 cycles; (b) 1 × 108 cycles < Nf < 7 × 108 cycles. (c) Haigh diagram for very-high-cycle fatigue limit of a high-strength steel [73]. Haigh diagrams for a titanium alloy [74] with equiaxed microstructure (EM) at (d) 107 cycles and (e) 109 cycles. (f) Haigh diagram for titanium alloys [54] with lamellar microstructure (LM), bimodal microstructure (BM), or EM.
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Figure 16. (a) S-N data and curves for titanium alloys produced by methods of additive and conventional manufacturing [78,79]. S-N curves at R = −1 for an additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V of Group 12 [58] without (b) and with (c) a treatment of hot isostatic pressing (HIP). Symbols with arrows representing runout specimens. Fatigue fracture surfaces of HIP specimens failed at the following: (d) σa = 700 MPa, Nf = 1.32 × 108 cycles; (e) σa = 525 MPa, Nf = 1.69 × 105 cycles; (f) σa = 525 MPa, Nf = 4.34 × 105 cycles; (g) σa = 420 MPa, Nf = 2.69 × 105 cycles [58].
Figure 16. (a) S-N data and curves for titanium alloys produced by methods of additive and conventional manufacturing [78,79]. S-N curves at R = −1 for an additively manufactured Ti-6Al-4V of Group 12 [58] without (b) and with (c) a treatment of hot isostatic pressing (HIP). Symbols with arrows representing runout specimens. Fatigue fracture surfaces of HIP specimens failed at the following: (d) σa = 700 MPa, Nf = 1.32 × 108 cycles; (e) σa = 525 MPa, Nf = 1.69 × 105 cycles; (f) σa = 525 MPa, Nf = 4.34 × 105 cycles; (g) σa = 420 MPa, Nf = 2.69 × 105 cycles [58].
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Figure 17. Simultaneous enhancement of tensile strength and ductility for Ti-6Al-4V produced by methods of additive [101] (a) and conventional [102] (b) manufacturing.
Figure 17. Simultaneous enhancement of tensile strength and ductility for Ti-6Al-4V produced by methods of additive [101] (a) and conventional [102] (b) manufacturing.
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Table 1. Ranking of main factors dominating very-high-cycle fatigue and the possible solutions.
Table 1. Ranking of main factors dominating very-high-cycle fatigue and the possible solutions.
RankDominating FactorPossible Solution
1Large porosityOptimization of AM parameters
2As-built roughed specimen surfaceMachining and/or polishing
3Big void-typed defectsHot isostatic pressing
4Trade-off between strength and plasticityMicrostructure design
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Gao, C.; Zhang, Y.; Jiang, J.; Fu, R.; Du, L.; Pan, X. Research Viewpoint on Performance Enhancement for Very-High-Cycle Fatigue of Ti-6Al-4V Alloys via Laser-Based Powder Bed Fusion. Crystals 2024, 14, 749. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst14090749

AMA Style

Gao C, Zhang Y, Jiang J, Fu R, Du L, Pan X. Research Viewpoint on Performance Enhancement for Very-High-Cycle Fatigue of Ti-6Al-4V Alloys via Laser-Based Powder Bed Fusion. Crystals. 2024; 14(9):749. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst14090749

Chicago/Turabian Style

Gao, Chun, Yang Zhang, Jingjiang Jiang, Rui Fu, Leiming Du, and Xiangnan Pan. 2024. "Research Viewpoint on Performance Enhancement for Very-High-Cycle Fatigue of Ti-6Al-4V Alloys via Laser-Based Powder Bed Fusion" Crystals 14, no. 9: 749. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst14090749

APA Style

Gao, C., Zhang, Y., Jiang, J., Fu, R., Du, L., & Pan, X. (2024). Research Viewpoint on Performance Enhancement for Very-High-Cycle Fatigue of Ti-6Al-4V Alloys via Laser-Based Powder Bed Fusion. Crystals, 14(9), 749. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst14090749

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