Abstract

Additive manufacturing provides an appealing means to process titanium alloy parts with new levels of conformability, complexity, and weight reduction. However, due to the heating/cooling rates and heat transfer associated with directed energy source material processing, the as-built AM parts contain unique material and microstructural features. In order to confidently manufacture fatigue critical additive manufactured (AM) Ti-6Al-4V parts, a better understanding of the interrelationships between powder feedstock, AM processes, structure of the processed parts, their resulting mechanical properties, and their performance under realistic loadings is necessary. Part I of this two-part collection focuses on the powder-process-structure relationships and how powder feedstock, manufacturing, and post-processing conditions can affect the microstructure and defect features that ultimately contribute to the fatigue performance of Ti-6Al-4V parts. The material and physical phenomena inherent to the AM process of Ti-6Al-4V are discussed in detail and related to the phase composition/structure, grain morphology, surface characteristics, defect size/distribution, and post-process treatments available for AM parts. This investigation is the foundation for the structure-performance relationships that will be discussed in detail in Part II.

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