One of the challenges regarding widespread use of parts created by the powder-bed fusion process is their high surface roughness, which necessitates some type of postbuild finishing process. Laser polishing… Click to show full abstract
One of the challenges regarding widespread use of parts created by the powder-bed fusion process is their high surface roughness, which necessitates some type of postbuild finishing process. Laser polishing (i.e., remelting), which uses surface-tension-driven flow to reduce the roughness of irradiated metallic surfaces, is one such potential finishing process. This work examines the effect that surface features on the as-built part have on the performance of continuous-wave laser remelting of Co-Cr-Mo alloy (Celsit 21-P, Stellite 21 equivalent) samples produced by powder-bed fusion manufacturing. This is accomplished by comparison of three-dimensional surface measurements before and after laser remelting using focus-variation microscopy. Engineering models used to simulate the surface profile as a result of laser remelting are also presented. The results from this work provide insight into the fundamental physics occurring during laser remelting on parts made by powder-bed fusion and will aid parameter selection for surface consolidation and smoothing.
               
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