Predicting the evolutionary behavior of microstructures with the help of numerical simulation techniques has become an essential tool for studying the solidification process of metal additive manufacturing. As a mesoscopic… Click to show full abstract
Predicting the evolutionary behavior of microstructures with the help of numerical simulation techniques has become an essential tool for studying the solidification process of metal additive manufacturing. As a mesoscopic model based on the diffusion interface theory, phase field method (PFM) can be used to predict the evolution of solidification microstructure. The open-source PFM framework PRISMS-PF can not only efficiently solve systems of equations with billions of degrees of freedom, but also provide a simple adaptive mesh control module. In this paper, based on the open-source PFM framework PRISMS-PF, a phase field-finite element method (PFM-FEM) simulation flow for the solidification process of A356 aluminum alloy additive manufacturing in the two-dimensional case was established. The effects of temperature gradient, scan rate and initial solid-phase morphology on solute concentration, dendrite spacing and dendrite morphology were analyzed and compared with experimental results for verification. Analyzing the results for different temperature gradients and scan rates cases, it was found that the increase of temperature gradient or scan rate made the primary dendrite arm space decrease; as the ratio of temperature gradient to scan rate decreased, the solidification morphology gradually changed from flat crystal to cellular crystal, columnar crystal, and even dendritic structure. Analyzing the results for different initial solid-phase morphology cases, it was found that the influence of initial solid-phase morphology on dendrite growth increased as the ratio of temperature gradient to scan rate decreased. The above influence rules were mainly related to the composition overcooling zone under different conditions. This paper is expected to provide a theoretical support for the effective regulation of solidification microstructure in metal additive manufacturing.
               
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