Abstract

As the core component of China Fusion Engineering Test Reactor (CFETR), the forming and manufacturing of the first wall faces severe challenges due to the constraints of materials, service environment and geometric structure. The microstructure and mechanical properties of welded joints obtained by rolled and laser selective melted (SLMed) reduced activation ferritic/martensitic (RAFM) steel were investigated in depth. The microstructure analysis results showed that the weld metal (WM) was composed of coarse lath martensite and δ-ferrite, while the microstructure were mainly coarse grains in heat affected zone (HAZ) which was easy to break. The average grains size of SLMed RAFM steel (S-RAFMs) was smaller than that of rolled RAFM steel (R-RAFMs), since the rapid melting and solidification of laser in the additive manufacturing process prevented grains to grow. The microstructure of R-RAFMs joint was relatively more uniform and there was no obvious texture and preferred orientation, while the WM of S-RAFMs joint had a weak cubic texture. The results of mechanical properties showed that the S-RAFMs joints exhibited higher strength (UTS = 697.46 MPa) and the R-RAFMs joints exhibited better plasticity (EL = 13.49 %) under the same tensile conditions. The tensile and impact fracture morphologies showed that the fracture mechanism of two joints was ductile-brittle mixed fracture, and the dimples of R-RAFMs joints were finer and denser. It was clearly observed that the hardness of WM (∼390–430 HV0.3) was higher than that of the base metal (BM) (∼190–230 HV0.3) from the hardness distributions along the width directions. The average hardness of BM in R-RAFMs joint (227 HV0.3) was lower than S-RAFMs joint (197.3 HV0.3), which was mainly related to the fine grain strengthening effect during SLM forming. The above results may provide theoretical guidance for the high-performance manufacturing of the first wall and promote the application of SLM and EBW technology in the field of nuclear fusion.

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