University of Leicester
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Digital materials design by thermal-fluid science for multi-metal additive manufacturing

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-08-03, 16:31 authored by Junji Shinjo, Chinnapat Panwisawas
Metal additive manufacturing is promising for designing advanced metallic parts of complex geometries. The challenge lies in process control on melt flow dynamics, alloy mixing and vapour mass loss, which is significantly vital for the final quality. A high-fidelity thermal-solutal-fluid modelling approach including accurate tracking of surface shape, thermo-capillary dynamics and vaporisation has been developed. Multi-species formulations are also included for multi-metal simulation. Using this method, the physical link between metal vapour mass loss and melt flow process for 21 transition metals and 3 binary alloys is investigated. The mass loss rate is governed by a fluid dynamic parameter of Reynolds number with a simple proportional correlation linked with thermal-fluid behavior of the melt pool, and convective mixing further complicates the behaviour in in-situ binary alloying. The digital materials approach is effective in understanding complex interdependent thermal-fluid flow dynamics and can advance process-based materials design.

History

Citation

1359-6454

Author affiliation

NISCO UK Research Centre, School of Engineering

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

ACTA MATERIALIA

Volume

210

Publisher

Elsevier

issn

1359-6454

eissn

1873-2453

Acceptance date

2021-03-18

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2022-03-23

Language

English