X-ray refraction distinguishes unprocessed powder from empty pores in selective laser melting Ti-6Al-4V

For the first time, X-ray refraction techniques are proven for the identification of void formation in Ti-6Al-4V parts produced by selective laser melting. The topology and volume fraction of pores are measured in samples produced with different laser energy density. Unique X-ray refraction methods...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: R. Laquai, B. R. Müller, G. Kasperovich, J. Haubrich, G. Requena, G. Bruno
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-02-01
Series:Materials Research Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21663831.2017.1409288
Description
Summary:For the first time, X-ray refraction techniques are proven for the identification of void formation in Ti-6Al-4V parts produced by selective laser melting. The topology and volume fraction of pores are measured in samples produced with different laser energy density. Unique X-ray refraction methods identify different kinds of defects, characteristic to the regions below and above the optimum laser energy density, namely unprocessed powder (unmolten powder particles, balling effect, and fusion defects) from empty keyhole pores. Furthermore, it is possible to detect small inhomogeneities (voids or cracks) with sizes below the spatial resolution of optical microscopy and X-ray computed tomography. IMPACT STATEMENT For the first time, we show that, unparalleled by high-resolution X-ray-computed tomography or electron microscopy, X-ray refraction can distinguish unprocessed powder from empty pores in additive manufactured materials.
ISSN:2166-3831