Abstract

The microstructure adjustment and the stray grains inhibition are important for the preparation of Nickel-based single crystal (SX) superalloys by laser directed energy deposition (L-DED). In this work, the single channel monolayer and single channel five-layers DD6 SX superalloys have been prepared by L-DED. The macroscopic simulations in the deposition processing and multiscale characterizations of deposition structure were used to analyze the formation and evolution mechanisms of unique precipitations and stray grains. Results shows that the larger laser power and higher powder feed rate have a positive impact on the epitaxial growth of columnar dendrite and the elimination of stray grains. The residual stress caused by the complex thermal cycles is not the direct reason that induce the formation of SGs, but the rapid movement of dislocations result in the formation of sub-grain boundary. According to the columnar transition to equiaxed theory (CET), temperature field simulation and analysis of element segregation behaviors, the element segregation results in the unique microstructure, include petal-shaped γ/γ′ eutectic and demarcation band with a thickness of a single γ/γ′ eutectic. Besides, the geometric size of γ/γ′ eutectic decrease with respect to the deposition height. With the change of height at deposition region, dendritic orientation deviations affect the uniformity of element segregation, resulting in variations in γ′ phase and γ/γ′ eutectic dimensions between dendritic core and the inter-dendrite zone at the microscopic level and manifesting as grain boundaries at the mesoscale. At the same time, the formation mechanisms of carbide and adjacent γ/γ′ eutectic leads to the misorientations between the dendrite core and the inter-dendrite zone, which also appears as stray grains at the mesoscopic scale.

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