Abstract

In this paper, the microstructure formation mechanism of an AlSi10Mg alloy prepared by laser directed energy deposition (DED-LB) and its influence on the mechanical properties was fully studied. The relationships between the microstructure characteristic scale, the molten pool solidification/thermal cycle conditions, and the tensile mechanical properties were established by combining the numerical simulation, theoretical calculation, and experimental validation. The as-deposited microstructure consists of the columnar α-Al dendritic array growing epitaxially along the building direction with the primary dendritic arm spacing of 18 ± 4.5 µm, the dendritic arm cell of 3 ± 1 µm surrounded by the refined eutectic network, and the Si precipitation of 17.7 ± 0.8 nm dispersed in the α-Al dendritic trunk. The feature size of the primary dendritic arm spacing and the dendritic arm cell size can be well predicted using the Kurz-Fisher and KGT dendritic growth models. The formation and size evolution of the Si precipitation was well described by the non-isothermal aging KWN model for the first time. The as-DED-LB-processed AlSi10Mg alloy exhibits a good comprehensive mechanical property with a yield strength of 187 ± 1.5 MPa and elongation to fracture of 7.4 ± 0.5%. The boundary strengthening from the eutectic phase network, the load-bearing capacity for dislocations caused by refined dendritic arms, and the precipitation strengthening of nano-Si particles play a major role in the improvement of the tensile strength and hardening ability. As a result, a quantitative relationship of the processing–microstructure–performance has been systematically investigated and established, which explores a method for the precision control and large-scale application of DED-AlSi10Mg alloys.

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