Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Sep 2023)
Enhanced strength-ductility synergy of laser additive manufactured stainless steel/Ni-based superalloy dissimilar materials characterized by bionic mechanical interlocking structures
Abstract
The unique mechanism of toughness enhancement found in natural materials has served as inspiration for the development of a new generation of dissimilar metal materials (DMMs). Here we present a bionic mechanical interlocking structure strategy that stainless steel 316L and Inconel 625 DMMs with an enhanced strength-conductivity trade-off processed by laser additive manufacturing (AM), possessing an ultimate tensile strength of 675.64 MPa, and a uniform elongation of 33.6%. The incompatible deformation between SS316L (plastic deformation) and IN625 (non-deformation) contributes to overcoming the strength-ductility trade-off. The integration of alternating soft and hard non-uniform structures plays a pivotal role in effectively absorbing and dissipating the energy introduced by external loads during crack propagation. This geometric arrangement and multilevel structure at the interface notably reduces the effective stress intensity factor along the crack path, leading to added resistance against loading. The multi-strengthening mechanism coupled with the heterogeneous deformability gives the material excellent strength-ductility synergy, especially the bionic mechanical interlocking structure extending the crack expansion path, which helps to avoid premature failure of weak interface layers. These findings will provide new insights into the controlled design of high-performance DMMs, which highlights the potential to inherit merits from constitutive materials for better strength-ductility combinations.