Abstract
Medium/High‑carbon steels are considered susceptible to cracking during rapid cooling in laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) applications. Also, water-atomized (WA) steel powders, containing oxides, have been associated with porosity defects during this process. In this study, LPBF was employed to process WA high‑carbon low-alloy steel powders under three operational regimes – conduction, transition, and keyhole modes. Analyses based on the scaling law of keyhole stability, melt pool dimensions, and x-ray computed tomography (XCT) suggested that processing under the transition mode closely resembled a stable keyhole, enabling the successfully printing of water-atomized powders to a density of 99.93 %. Subsequent heat treatment, hardness, and residual stress assessments presented a prominent structural softening and relief of compressive stress under the transition mode. This was attributed to the intense in-situ tempering and re-austenitization that occurred within each layer. Under this condition, with no post heat treatment, an ultimate tensile strength of 1250 MPa with >2.6 % elongation was achieved. Finally, the ball-on-disk test showed that wear performance of the printed steels was primarily governed by the tribo-oxides, with a limited influence from the microstructural variation.
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