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Exploring the possibility of a stainless steel and glass composite produced by additive manufacturing

G. Sander, Derui Jiang, Yuxiang Wu, N. Birbilis

2020Materials & Design22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The production of components using powder bed fusion presents unique possibilities for manufacturing. The process of selective laser melting (SLM) can permit fusion of powders, including powder blends and alloys comprised from elemental powders. In this context, exploring the possibility of making composites by blending stainless steel 316 L and glass powder (the latter being a waste product) was explored. Such composites were investigated on the basis of (i) significant reduction in component cost, as glass powder waste is a common industrial by-product, (ii) upgrading recycled waste, (iii) the possibility of lowering component density (the density of glass is less than three times that of stainless steel), and (iv) the possibility of unique physical properties if glass remains amorphous. Herein, laser scan strategies were optimised in order to produce solid cubes and tensile test specimens. Microstructural and phase analysis were carried out by electron microscopy and x-ray techniques. Unique CrSi oxides were observed in the manufactured microstructure. The work herein presents an exploratory approach into the development of novel engineered composites utilising additive manufacturing.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceMicrostructureSelective laser meltingComposite numberFusionContext (archaeology)Amorphous solidComposite materialPhase (matter)Glass recyclingMetallurgyScanning electron microscopePaleontologyChemistryBiologyOrganic chemistryLinguisticsPhilosophyAdditive Manufacturing Materials and ProcessesAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing TechnologiesHigh Entropy Alloys Studies
Exploring the possibility of a stainless steel and glass composite produced by additive manufacturing | Litcius