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Mechanical rolling and annealing of wire-arc additively manufactured stainless steel plates

J. W. Elmer, Gordon R. Gibbs

2021Science and Technology of Welding & Joining18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Thin walls of 304L stainless steel were fabricated by wire-arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) followed by post-build thermomechanical processing to modify the as-built microstructure and properties. The walls were made using a high-deposition-rate robotically controlled gas metal arc welding system and were characterised using optical microscopy and tensile tested for mechanical properties. Post-processing consisted of mechanical rolling the walls to 25% and 40% strains, followed by annealing at 1050°C to demonstrate a wide range of properties. Results show that WAAM can be used to build custom-sized semi-finished parts or blanks that can later be thermomechanically processed to increase strength and ductility through recrystallisation of the as-built microstructure, and/or processed into desired shapes with improved mechanical properties.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceMicrostructureWeldingAnnealing (glass)MetallurgyUltimate tensile strengthComposite materialDuctility (Earth science)Thermomechanical processingCreepAdditive Manufacturing Materials and ProcessesAdditive Manufacturing and 3D Printing TechnologiesWelding Techniques and Residual Stresses
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