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Ti-6Al-4V hollow-strut lattice materials by laser powder bed fusion

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 09:29 authored by Jordan NoronhaJordan Noronha, Jason Rogers, Martin LearyMartin Leary, Elizabeth Kyriakou, Simon Inverarity, Rajarshi DasRajarshi Das, Milan BrandtMilan Brandt, Ma QianMa Qian
Hollow-strut metal lattices are an emerging class of cellular metallic materials. However, their mechanical properties at relative densities (ρRD) higher than 10% are largely unknown because conventional manufacturing methods are ill-equipped to fabricate them. In this study, face-centered cubic (FCC) and FCC with Z-struts (FCCZ) Ti‐6Al‐4V hollow-strut lattices with ρRD = 8–16% were fabricated using laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) additive manufacturing (AM). Both lattice topologies exhibited yield strength (σ*) and elastic modulus (E*) at the upper empirical limits for solid-strut metal lattices with similar ρRD values. Furthermore, the difference in σ* or E* between hollow-strut FCC and FCCZ lattices is much smaller than that between solid-strut FCC and FCCZ lattices. The deformation behaviours and failure modes of the LPBF-manufactured Ti‐6Al‐4V hollow-strut FCC and FCCZ lattices were investigated by uniaxial compression and finite element modelling (FEM). In addition to the lattice topology, the fine (∼20 µm) prior-β grains in the Ti‐6Al‐4V hollow-strut thin walls contribute positively to the superior mechanical properties, compared with the coarse grains in Ti‐6Al‐4V solid-strut lattices. Finally, the manufacturability established in this work provides a reliable pathway for LPBF-AM of Ti‐6Al‐4V hollow-strut lattices. The findings of this work are expected to apply to other hollow-strut lattice topologies.

Funding

Novel micro-architecture-optimised metal lattice structures by 3D printing

Australian Research Council

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History

Journal

Additive Manufacturing

Volume

72

Number

103637

Start page

1

End page

18

Total pages

18

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006124237

Esploro creation date

2023-08-24

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