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Laser-metal interaction dynamics during additive manufacturing resolved by detection of thermally-induced electron emission

Philip J. Depond, John C. Fuller, Saad A. Khairallah, J. R. Angus, Gabe Guss, Manyalibo J. Matthews, Aiden A. Martin

2020Communications Materials37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract In situ monitoring is required to improve the understanding and increase the reliability of additive manufacturing methods such as laser powder bed fusion (LPBF). Current diagnostic methods for LPBF capture optical images, X-ray radiographs, or measure the emission of thermal or acoustic signals from the component. Herein, a methodology based on the thermal emission of electrons - thermionic emission - from the metal surface during LPBF is proposed which can resolve laser-material interaction dynamics. The high sensitivity of thermionic emission to surface temperature and surface morphology is revealed to enable precise determination of the transition between conduction and keyhole mode melting regimes. Increases in thermionic emission are correlated to laser scanning conditions that give rise to pore formation and regions where surface defects are pronounced. The information presented here is a critical step in furthering our understanding and validation of laser-based metal additive manufacturing.

Topics & Concepts

Thermionic emissionLaserKeyholeMaterials scienceElectronThermalThermal conductionLaser power scalingOptoelectronicsComposite materialOpticsThermodynamicsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsWeldingAdditive Manufacturing Materials and ProcessesLaser-induced spectroscopy and plasmaWelding Techniques and Residual Stresses
Laser-metal interaction dynamics during additive manufacturing resolved by detection of thermally-induced electron emission | Litcius