Materials & Design (May 2024)
Grain size prediction for stainless steel fabricated by material extrusion additive manufacturing
Abstract
Most traditional powder melting-based additive manufacturing (AM) technologies generally yield high-performance parts at the expense of additional cost and energy consumption. As an economical and efficient alternative method, material extrusion (ME) that deploys polymer-based filaments with highly filled metal particles offers the possibility of scalable, low-cost fabrication of metal components. As a critical step, sintering governs the mechanical strength and geometry of the final parts. The grain growth behavior induced during sintering should be well controlled to achieve the parts with the desired mechanical performance. Due to the nature of AM, grain growth kinetics could also involve extremely complex grain boundary migration and atomic diffusion mechanisms caused by the heterogeneous pore distribution. In this work, an analytical model was developed to predict and understand the grain growth behavior of stainless steel (SS) 316L built by ME-based sintering-assisted AM. Such a model accounts for anisotropic viscosity parameters calibrated through a three-dimensional dilatometry test, enabling the prediction of grain size evolution during sintering. Grain growth kinetic parameters were further identified by the grain size data at the heating and holding stages. To validate and generalize the model, we also conducted the grain size evolution prediction under different sintering temperature profiles for as-built SS 316L specimens. This work will provide scientific insights into the grain growth behavior of metal parts built by this AM technique and its understanding can be readily transferred to other sintering-assisted AM processes like binder jetting and ink writing for metal structure creation.