Abstract

Aluminum-lithium alloys have wide applications in aerospace industries in the 21st century but their manufacturing is extremely difficult due to the 10 times more equilibrium hydrogen concentration in the liquid than the solubility limit in traditional Al alloys (0.036 mL/100gSTP). The reduction of solubility from liquid to solid by 95% leads to hydrogen porosity being hard to control. In this work, a three-dimensional multicomponent cellular automaton (CA) model is coupled with CALPHAD calculations to simulate the nucleation and growth of hydrogen porosity and its interaction with surrounding dendritic structures during the solidification of Al-Cu-Li alloys. By quantifying the effects of hydrogen concentration, cooling rate, and Li content, it was found the solidification conditions can effectively reduce porosity size. To validate the model, X-ray computed tomography (XCT) has been used to obtain not only the size but also the morphology of porosity as a function of cooling conditions. It was found that porosity grows elongated and tortuous shape at slow cooling rates between columnar dendrites, filling up the empty spaces of secondary arms, while it tends to be dispersed spherical shape when its surrounding grains are refined to equiaxed structures at high cooling rates.

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