Abstract

Laser additive manufacturing (AM) of reaction-based metal matrix composites (MMCs) involves highly complex and non-equilibrium material transformation behavior, including melting, dissolution, precipitation, and solidification. Yet, the dynamics and interplay of these phase transformation processes remain poorly understood, posing substantial challenges in identifying the microstructure formation mechanism, and predicting and controlling the microstructure in the printed parts. Here we performed the in-situ X-ray diffraction experiment to characterize the phase evolution dynamics of the 316L + 10 vol.%TiC system during laser melting, which provides direct and quantitative insights of the complex phase reaction and evolution dynamics under rapid heating and cooling conditions relevant to additive manufacturing of reaction-based MMCs. Further in-depth thermodynamic and kinetic calculations revealed that most of the phase evolution behavior observed in the in-situ X-ray diffraction experiment cannot be solely explained by widely used equilibrium thermodynamic models, and diffusion-controlled nonequilibrium dissolution and precipitation kinetics must be considered to elucidate the complex phase evolution behavior, including incomplete TiC dissolution, and three-step TiC precipitation. The three distinct types of precipitates generate unique hierarchical TiC micro- and nanostructures, which enhances the yield strength from 513 MPa to 877 MPa by 71 %, tensile strength from 628 MPa to 1054 MPa by 68 %, and Young's modulus from 193 GPa to 221 GPa by 14 %. The findings of our research provide the knowledge foundation for the design of unique microstructures and advanced MMC materials through laser AM.

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