Abstract

• Reduced activation ferritic/martensitic steel was fabricated by wire arc additive manufacturing. • The as-deposited microstructure exhibited the heterogeneous band characteristics. • Microstructure differences caused the periodical hardness and anisotropic tensile properties. • A potentially detrimental softening zone, was found at the heat-affected zone of the as-deposited RAFM steel. Reduced activation ferritic/martensitic (RAFM) steel is an iron-based alloy as a candidate structural material in fusion reactor. This paper evaluates the compatibility of RAFM steel as a choice material for wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM). Two specimens of RAFM steels with high and low heat input were fabricated by WAAM. The effects of the heat input on the microstructure, microhardness and tensile properties of samples were investigated. The fusion boundaries are spaced uniformly in the whole sample. Three distinctive zones were present in the periodic region, including heat-affected zone (HAZ), columnar grains zone and fine-grained zone occurred alternatively. The HAZ was affected by the heat input. The fully γ-annealed top region consisted of epitaxial elongated grains without HAZ. The periodic pattern in microhardness along the building direction was found which was related to the periodic microstructure featured. The tensile properties presented anisotropic characteristics due to the heterogeneous microstructure. Further analysis indicated that the grain coarsening in the HAZ and C precipitates distributed at the grain boundaries caused substantial softened in the HAZ, resulted in the lower localized microhardness and tensile strength. Compared to the high heat input specimen, the low heat input specimen had smaller grain sizes, higher microhardness and tensile properties.

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