Thermal model for the directed energy deposition of composite coatings of 316L stainless steel enriched with tungsten carbides ; Belgium

peer reviewed ; This work focuses on the thermal modeling of the Directed Energy Deposition of a composite coating (316L stainless steel reinforced by Tungsten carbides) on a 316L substrate. The developed finite element model predicts the thermal history and the melt pool dimension evolution in the middle section of the clad during deposition. Numerical results were correlated with experimental analysis (light optical and scanning electron microscopies and thermocouple records) to validate the model and discuss the possible solidification mechanisms. It was proven that implementation of forced... Mehr ...

Verfasser: El Fetni, Seifallah
Maurizi-Enrici, Tommaso
Niccolini, Tobia
Tran, Hoang Son
Dedry, Olivier
Duchene, Laurent
Mertens, Anne
Habraken, Anne
Dokumenttyp: journal article
Erscheinungsdatum: 2021
Schlagwörter: Thermal history / Forced convection / Heat accumulation / Modified conductivity / Directed energy deposition (DED) / Marangoni phenomenon / Engineering / computing & technology / Materials science & engineering / Ingénierie / informatique & technologie / Science des matériaux & ingénierie
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27372416
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/259506

peer reviewed ; This work focuses on the thermal modeling of the Directed Energy Deposition of a composite coating (316L stainless steel reinforced by Tungsten carbides) on a 316L substrate. The developed finite element model predicts the thermal history and the melt pool dimension evolution in the middle section of the clad during deposition. Numerical results were correlated with experimental analysis (light optical and scanning electron microscopies and thermocouple records) to validate the model and discuss the possible solidification mechanisms. It was proven that implementation of forced convection in the boundary conditions was of great importance to ensure equilibrium between input energy and heat losses. The maximum peak temperature shows a slight increase trend for the first few layers, followed by an apparent stabilization with increasing clad height. That demonstrates the high heat loss through boundaries. While in literature, most of the modeling studies are focused on single or few layer geometries, this work describes a multi-layered model able to predict the thermal field history during deposition and give consistent data about the new materiel. The model can be applied on other shapes under recalibration. The methodology of calibration is detailed as well as the sensitivity analysis to input parameters.