Abstract

The thermal-metallurgical modeling of microstructure development was further advanced during single-crystal superalloy weld pool solidification by coupling of heat transfer model, columnar/equiaxed transition (CET) model and multicomponent dendrite growth model on the basis criteria of minimum dendrite velocity, constitutional undercooling and marginal stability of planar front. It is clearly indicated that heat input (laser power and welding speed) and welding configuration simultaneously influence the stray grain formation, columnar/equiaxed transition and dendrite growth. For beneficial (001) and [100] welding configuration, the microstructure development along the solid/liquid interface is symmetrically distributed about the weld pool centerline throughout the weld pool. Finer columnar in [001] epitaxial dendrite growth region is kinetically favored at the bottom of the weld pool. For detrimental (001) and [110] welding configuration, the microstructure development along the solid/liquid interface is asymmetrically distributed. The dendrite trunk spacing along the solid/liquid interface from the beginning to end of solidification morphologically increases on the left side of the weld pool, while it spontaneously decreases on the right side. The vulnerable location of solidification cracking is confined in the [100] dendrite growth region on the right side of the weld pool because of increasing metallurgical contributing factors of severe stray grain formation, centerline grain boundary formation and coarse dendrite size. The mechanism of crystallography-dependent asymmetrical solidification cracking due to microstructure anomalies is proposed. It is crystallographically favorable for predominant morphology instability to deteriorate weldability. Active [100] dendrite growth region is diminished in the shallow elliptical weld pool by optimum low heat input (low laser power and high welding speed) with (001) and [100] welding configuration to essentially facilitate single-crystal solidification conditions and provide enough resistant to solidification cracking. Moreover, the theoretical predictions agree well with the experiment results. The reliable weldability maps are therefore established to determine the prerequisite for successful crack-free laser welding or cladding. The useful model is also applicable for other single-crystal superalloys with similar metallurgical properties.

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