Abstract

Additive manufacturing (AM) by electron beam melting (EBM) has many advantages over the laser-based AM techniques, but is subjected to a lower cooling rate and a long time thermal exposure with a much higher temperature. Therefore, the EBMed aluminum alloys commonly have coarser solidification structures such that lower mechanical properties compared to their SLMed counterparts. In this work, we proposed a strategy of introducing TiB2 particles into heat-resistant Al-Cu-Mg-Fe-Ni alloy to enhance the grain refinement and heat resistance for EBM fabrication. Applying a “presintering-densification” scanning strategy, near fully dense samples were build up with precise contours and good surface quality. The as-built EBMed TiB2/Al-Cu-Mg-Fe-Ni composite possessed a highly homogeneous microstructure with uniformly distributed TiB2 and Fe/Ni rich intermetallic particles. A fully equiaxed grain structure was achieved in the composite with a profoundly refined grain size of ~9 µm. The improved grain refinement effect was attributed to the sufficient activation of TiB2 particles as heterogeneous nuclei under a high cooling rate. Additionally, the solidified microstructure has shown an excellent thermal stability under ~500 °C during EBM process. The coexistence of thermal stable TiB2 and Fe, Ni-rich intermetallics at grain boundaries restricted the grain growth effectively. The as-built composite exhibited a high tensile strength of 253.4 MPa with an outstanding elongation of 13.5 %. After a T6-like heat treatment, the tensile strength was increased to 322 MPa with an elongation of 9.8 %. This study might shed a new light on designing high performance aluminum alloys/composites suitable for EBM technique.

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