Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Nov 2023)

Effect of powder milling on sintering behavior and monotonic and cyclic mechanical properties of Mo and Mo–Si lattices produced by direct ink writing

  • Serhii Tkachenko,
  • Karel Slámečka,
  • Carolina Oliver-Urrutia,
  • Olha Ksenzova,
  • Vendula Bednaříková,
  • Michaela Remešová,
  • Karel Dvořák,
  • Matej Baláž,
  • Andrea Deák,
  • Martin Kachlík,
  • Ladislav Čelko,
  • Edgar B. Montufar

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27
pp. 2475 – 2489

Abstract

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Molybdenum is a refractory metal regarded as a promising basis for producing high-temperature components. However, the potential of manufacturing molybdenum-based structures by direct ink writing (DIW) has not been explored. In this study, three-dimensional porous molybdenum (Mo) and molybdenum-silicon (Mo–Si) composite lattices were fabricated using DIW with non-milled and milled powders. The effects of Mo powder morphology (resulting from milling) and chemical composition (alloying Mo with 3 and 10 wt% of Si) on the microstructure, phase composition, and static and cyclic compression properties at room temperature were investigated. Lattices fabricated from commercial spherical Mo powder exhibited the highest intra-filament porosity. Conversely, lattices fabricated from milled Mo powder were denser and had higher compressive strength, offset stress, and quasi-elastic gradient. Alloying Mo with Si during sintering resulted in composite lattices with Mo + Mo3Si microstructure. A low content of Mo3Si slightly decreased monotonic compression properties but did not affect the cyclic compression response compared to Mo lattices made from milled powder. In contrast, a high content of Mo3Si produced quasi-brittle lattices with reduced compressive strength and increased damage accumulation during cyclic loading. The cyclic behavior of all lattices was characterized by a ratcheting-dominated stress-strain response. Lattices fabricated from milled Mo and milled Mo-3 wt.%Si powders demonstrated superior performance compared to those fabricated from commercial spherical Mo and milled Mo-10 wt%Si powders. The results suggest that using milled powders can enhance the mechanical reliability and promote the use of DIW as preferred additive manufacturing technology for the fabrication of Mo–Si composite lattices.

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