Investigation of Laser Powder Bed Fusion Parameters with Respect to Their Influence on the Thermal Conductivity of 316L Samples
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Does powder degradation lead to increased oxidation and the inclusion of foreign particles, thus reducing thermal conductivity?
- To what extent does increased porosity lead to deteriorated thermal conductivity?
- Does the grain growth direction of the microstructure have a decisive effect on the thermal conductivity in the build-up direction?
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
4. Conclusions
- Samples were produced from 316L powder using LPBF. The parameters were within the normal process window for producing dense specimens without errors (62.5 J/mm3) and in accordance with the state of the art [27]. Nevertheless, the thermal conductivity was 0.66 W/mK lower than in the conventionally produced material.
- Degradation in the powder feedstock can lead to an increase in oxides, more condensate, and fumes on the powder particles [26]. In this study, it could be proven that this leads to a small but relevant decrease in thermal conductivity. The conductivity decreased to 14.62 W/mK.
- When producing LPBF parts from 316L buildup, orientation and process parameters can have an impact on microstructure and crystallographic texturing [22,23,25]. In common literature, this is often investigated with respect to mechanical properties. The results of this study show that the present anisotropy does not have a negative influence on thermal conductivity.
- Reducing the part densities from 99.99% down to 95.29% leads to a decrease in thermal conductivity of 13.5%. It can be stated that part densities and micro-porosities have the most important influence on the thermal conductivity of LPBF-manufactured 316L specimens.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Method | Laser–Flash Analysis | Hot-Wire Method | Heat-Flow Meter | Guarded Hot Plate |
---|---|---|---|---|
Temperature range | −100 to 2800 °C | −150 to 700 °C | −20 to 100 °C | −100 to 1000 °C |
Materials | Solids, powders, pastes, foils, and liquids | Solids, powders, pastes, foils, and liquids | Solids: predominantly glass, ceramics, metals, stone, and plastic | Solids: predominantly insulating materials and elastomers |
Uncertainly | Up to 4% | Up to 1% | Up to 2% | Up to 2% |
Measuring range | From 0.1 to 4000 W/mK | From 0.005 to 1800 W/mK | From 0.01 to 500 W/mK | From 0.0001 to 2 W/mK |
Advantages | Temperature range, measurable materials, short measuring time | Short measuring time, measurable materials, and high accuracy | High accuracy, reproducibility, and simple construction | High accuracy and reproducibility |
Disadvantages | Expensive and complex sample preparation; susceptible to application errors | Anisotropy is not considered, in specimen preparation | Long measuring time, time-consuming calibrations, and sample preparation | Long measuring time, large specimen geometry, and is only for low conductivities |
Standard | ASTM C714 and DIN EN 821 | ASTM C1113 and ASTM D7896 | ASTM C518 and DIN EN 12664 | ASTM C177 and ISO 8302 |
Test Series 0 | Test Series 1 | Test Series 2 | Test Series 3 | Test Series 4 | Test Series 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
conventionally manufactured 316L | additively manufactured 316L in a horizontal direction | additively manufactured 316L in an upright direction | additively manufactured 316L with oversize/degraded powder | additively manufactured 316L with fresh powder | additively manufactured 316L with lower VED |
VED = 62.5 J/mm3 PL = 180 W vs = 800 mm/s ds = 50 µm Ds = 45 µm Line Scanning | VED = 62.5 J/mm3 PL = 180 W vs = 800 mm/s ds = 50 µm Ds = 45 µm Line Scanning | VED = 62.5 J/mm3 PL = 180 W vs = 800 mm/s ds = 50 µm Ds = 45 µm Line Scanning | VED = 62.5 J/mm3 PL = 180 W vs = 800 mm/s ds = 50 µm Ds = 45 µm Line Scanning | VED = 37.5 J/mm3 PL = 180 W vs = 1333 mm/s ds = 50 µm Ds = 45 µm Line Scanning |
Fresh Powder | Used and Sieved | Oversized Grain | |
---|---|---|---|
x [µm] at Q3 = 10.0% | 22.6 | 23.3 | 33 |
x [µm] at Q3 = 50.0% | 33.3 | 33.9 | 54.9 |
x [µm] at Q3 = 90.0% | 46.4 | 45.7 | 139.6 |
x [µm] at Q0 = 10.0% | 14.3 | 14.9 | 18.1 |
x [µm] at Q0 = 50.0% | 24.8 | 25.7 | 33.1 |
x [µm] at Q0 = 90.0% | 37.3 | 38.2 | 50.9 |
Mean value SPHT3 | 0.886 | 0.892 | 0.831 |
Mean value SPHT0 | 0.904 | 0.907 | 0.887 |
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Eichler, F.; Balc, N.; Bremen, S.; Nink, P. Investigation of Laser Powder Bed Fusion Parameters with Respect to Their Influence on the Thermal Conductivity of 316L Samples. J. Manuf. Mater. Process. 2024, 8, 166. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp8040166
Eichler F, Balc N, Bremen S, Nink P. Investigation of Laser Powder Bed Fusion Parameters with Respect to Their Influence on the Thermal Conductivity of 316L Samples. Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing. 2024; 8(4):166. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp8040166
Chicago/Turabian StyleEichler, Fabian, Nicolae Balc, Sebastian Bremen, and Philipp Nink. 2024. "Investigation of Laser Powder Bed Fusion Parameters with Respect to Their Influence on the Thermal Conductivity of 316L Samples" Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing 8, no. 4: 166. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp8040166
APA StyleEichler, F., Balc, N., Bremen, S., & Nink, P. (2024). Investigation of Laser Powder Bed Fusion Parameters with Respect to Their Influence on the Thermal Conductivity of 316L Samples. Journal of Manufacturing and Materials Processing, 8(4), 166. https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp8040166