Abstract

Crack is a serious defect limiting the additive manufacturing of metal materials. The morphologies and crystallographic orientation of cracks for Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloy prepared by laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) were clarified. The mechanisms of crack initiation and propagation were expounded. Results show that the cracks were crisscrossed horizontally and propagated through multilayers along the building direction in the as-printed specimens. The cracks were classified as solidification cracks, which occurred in the final stage during solidification when the liquid fraction was <20%. Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloy has a wide temperature range between the liquidus and solidus, leading to high cracking susceptibility. Solidification cracks were prone to initiate at high-angle grain boundaries (HAGBs) and terminate at low-angle grain boundaries (LAGBs) or within grains. LPBF process could affect crack initiation and propagation by refining the grain size and inhibiting the growth orientation. Solidification and thermal shrinkage of adjacent grains during solidification provided subjective factors for cracking initiation. Directional preferential growth of dendrites along the 〈001〉 crystal orientation and the untimely filling of the liquid phase provided secondary factors. This study can provide theoretical guidance for crack suppression in additive manufacturing of 7075 aluminum alloy and other metals with high cracking susceptibility. • Crack initiation and propagation mechanisms of Al-Zn-Mg-Cu alloy in LPBF were investigated. • Internal cracks of as-printed specimens are solidification cracks. • Cracks occur in the final stage during solidification. • Oriented crystallization and texture affect the initiation and propagation of cracks. • Cracks initiate at straight HAGBs and terminate at LAGBs or within grains.

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