Abstract

The melt pool characteristics govern process stability and microstructure development during Laser Powder Bed Fusion (LBPF). The melt pool is strongly affected by the laser parameters and based on the melt pool depth-to-width ratio, three melting modes can be distinguished: conduction, transition, and keyhole mode. Finite element (FE) simulations have been extensively used to investigate the cyclic thermal history of the LPBF process and the effects of different process parameters on the part quality. However, the heat sources applied in such simulations can only accurately predict the melt pool behavior, and thus the temperature profile, when processing in conduction mode. As for the transition and keyhole regime modeling, heat source parameters or material properties are usually adjusted to make the simulated melt pool dimensions match the real values. This study proposes a novel approach to bypass the conventional heat source calibration strategy to simulate the LBPF process across different melting regimes. The predicted melt pool dimensions are validated for a wide range of process parameters applied to three different alloys: Ti-6Al-4 V, 316 L austenitic stainless steel (316 L), and 2507 super duplex stainless steel (SDSS). The average errors obtained on the melt pool width, depth, length, and aspect ratio are 9.7 %, 12.4 %, 14.5 %, and 14.3 % respectively. These results demonstrate how the proposed approach can capture the melt pool dimensions throughout different materials and melting modes eliminating the time-consuming heat source calibration steps and facilitating the LPBF modeling workflow.

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