Multiaxial fatigue behavior of additively manufactured Ti6Al4V alloy: Axial-torsional proportional loads
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2020
abstract:
Additive manufacturing (AM) techniques are under constant development and
selective laser melting (SLM) is among the most promising ones. However,
widespread use of AM techniques in many industries is limited by the
different/unusual mechanical properties of AM metallic parts, with respect to
traditionally processed ones, especially when dealing with complex fatigue
loading conditions. In fact, crack formation and propagation mechanisms are
mainly affected by the development of internal defects, residual stresses, and
microstructural changes. This is actually one of the major issues the materials
engineering community is facing today. In many applications, AM components
are subjected to multiaxial fatigue loads, arising from operating conditions
and/or from complex geometries, that unavoidably generate crack initiation
and propagation mechanisms. The aim of this study is to investigate the multiaxial
fatigue behavior of additively manufactured Ti6Al4V samples, made by
SLM. Fatigue tests, combining proportional axial and torsional loads, were performed
on thin-walled tubular specimens. Full-field measurement techniques,
such as the infrared thermography and digital image correlation, were also
used to capture temperature and strain evolutions, at both local scales and
global scales. Fatigue results highlighted damage mechanisms, and failure
modes are strongly related to the applied stress level.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
multiaxial fatigue; selective laser melting; additive manufacturing; Ti6Al4V; digital image correlation
List of contributors:
Fiocchi, Jacopo; Tuissi, Ausonio; Biffi, CARLO ALBERTO
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