Abstract

Abstract Cold spray additive manufacturing technology (CSAM) is a progressive method of 3D print of metals and alloys. Its inherent work principles allow production of the components below the material melting points, thereby avoiding several undesired material degradation processes. Among other inherently associated phenomena, the work principles of CSAM involve extreme plastic deformation of the materials, triggering formation of several types of lattice defects. Positron annihilation spectroscopy (PAS) is an analytical technique capable of studying deformation on the atomic scale level, even in extremely deformed materials. In our study, the first historical analysis of CSAM materials by PAS was carried out. For the demonstration, four different base metals were selected (Al, Cu, Ni, Ti). For these, the character of dislocations and vacancies was observed and the respective densities were quantified. The results show that the extremely high strain rate in the cold spray process prevents recovery of vacancies by diffusion to sinks. The deformation-induced vacancies agglomerate into small vacancy clusters. Hence, metals deposited using CSAM contain not only dislocations but also vacancy clusters. Both kinds of defects were detected by positron annihilation spectroscopy.

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