Abstract The ability to fabricate or join components of 316 L austenitic stainless steel using additive manufacturing (AM) processes such as laser and electron beam melting (EBM®) offers several advantages including… Click to show full abstract
Abstract The ability to fabricate or join components of 316 L austenitic stainless steel using additive manufacturing (AM) processes such as laser and electron beam melting (EBM®) offers several advantages including enhanced part complexity, narrow or absent heat affected zones, increased part precision, avoidance of filler materials (such as traditional welds), and the ability to create metallurgically sound bonds. These attributes can contribute to improved mechanical properties of the fabricated components and component repair in nuclear, aerospace, and chemical industries. In the present work, we report that austenitic 316 L stainless steel additively manufactured by EBM exhibits a 76% increase in the yield strength and a corresponding increase of 29% in the ultimate tensile strength in contrast to the wrought substrate and commercial forged 316 L stainless steel. The EBM clad 316 L stainless steel elongation was 36%. The wrought substrate equiaxed grain size was ∼30 μm in contrast to elongated, columnar grains ∼0.1 mm wide and >1 mm in length for the EBM cladding. Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) analysis revealed that these columnar grains, which exhibited very straight, and presumably special grain boundaries having a very high (100) texture, contained a variety of sub-grain microstructures consisting of low-angle sub-grain boundaries containing dislocation tangles and stacking-fault arrays, and homogeneously distributed Cr23C6 carbide precipitates, with no preferential carbide precipitation on either the straight, special columnar grain boundaries, or the very low-angle sub-grain boundaries. This observation and the formation of hierarchical microstructures which produce high strength and possibly corrosion resistance as a consequence of the absence of grain boundary carbide precipitation, illustrate the prospects for AM as a novel concept for achieving grain boundary engineering to promote high-strength and corrosion resistant alloys for high-temperature, corrosive environments, including elevated temperature nuclear reactor applications.
               
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