Metals (Jan 2022)

Fatigue Assessment of Inconel 625 Produced by Directed Energy Deposition from Miniaturized Specimens

  • Felipe Klein Fiorentin,
  • Duarte Maciel,
  • Jorge Gil,
  • Miguel Figueiredo,
  • Filippo Berto,
  • Abílio de Jesus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/met12010156
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 156

Abstract

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In recent years, the industrial application of Inconel 625 has grown significantly. This material is a nickel-base alloy, which is well known for its chemical resistance and mechanical properties, especially in high-temperature environments. The fatigue performance of parts produced via Metallic Additive Manufacturing (MAM) heavily rely on their manufacturing parameters. Therefore, it is important to characterize the properties of alloys produced by a given set of parameters. The present work proposes a methodology for characterization of the mechanical properties of MAM parts, including the material production parametrization by Laser Directed Energy Deposition (DED). The methodology consists of the testing of miniaturized specimens, after their production in DED, supported by a numerical model developed and validated by experimental data for stress calculation. An extensive mechanical characterization, with emphasis on high-cycle fatigue, of Inconel 625 produced via DED is herein discussed. The results obtained using miniaturized specimens were in good agreement with standard-sized specimens, therefore validating the applied methodology even in the case of some plastic effects. Regarding the high-cycle fatigue properties, the samples produced via DED presented good fatigue performance, comparable with other competing Metallic Additive Manufactured (MAMed) and conventionally manufactured materials.

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