Abstract Compositionally graded cylinders comprising FeCo-2V, a soft magnetic alloy, and 316L stainless steel, were produced by directed energy deposition incorporating two different gradient lengths. Five distinct regions in the… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Compositionally graded cylinders comprising FeCo-2V, a soft magnetic alloy, and 316L stainless steel, were produced by directed energy deposition incorporating two different gradient lengths. Five distinct regions in the microstructure were observed in both the as-printed and annealed gradients. When normalized for the gradient length, the gradients showed similar grain size and microhardness profiles. In tensile tests, the as-printed samples failed in the 316L region with an effective total “composite” strain of 20-30% and overall strength approaching that of wrought 316L. The annealed samples failed in the FeCo-2V region. Neither exhibited failure in the gradient region. Molecular dynamics simulations were used to calculate tensile strength as a function of composition, showing good correlation to experimental trends but not absolute values. This work demonstrates the tunability of site-specific properties using blown powder directed energy deposition to gradually grade from FeCo-2V to 316L stainless steel in a monolithic component.
               
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