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Microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of additively-manufactured Fe–Mn alloys

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Microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of additively-manufactured Fe–Mn alloys. / Liu, Peifeng; Wu, Hong; Liang, Luxin et al.
In: Materials Science and Engineering: A, Vol. 852, 143585, 05.09.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Liu, P, Wu, H, Liang, L, Song, D, Liu, J, Ma, X, Li, K, Fang, Q, Tian, Y & Baker, I 2022, 'Microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of additively-manufactured Fe–Mn alloys', Materials Science and Engineering: A, vol. 852, 143585. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2022.143585

APA

Liu, P., Wu, H., Liang, L., Song, D., Liu, J., Ma, X., Li, K., Fang, Q., Tian, Y., & Baker, I. (2022). Microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of additively-manufactured Fe–Mn alloys. Materials Science and Engineering: A, 852, Article 143585. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2022.143585

Vancouver

Liu P, Wu H, Liang L, Song D, Liu J, Ma X et al. Microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of additively-manufactured Fe–Mn alloys. Materials Science and Engineering: A. 2022 Sept 5;852:143585. Epub 2022 Aug 7. doi: 10.1016/j.msea.2022.143585

Author

Liu, Peifeng ; Wu, Hong ; Liang, Luxin et al. / Microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of additively-manufactured Fe–Mn alloys. In: Materials Science and Engineering: A. 2022 ; Vol. 852.

Bibtex

@article{4cd844a04b644ef4810e607089ab70ad,
title = "Microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of additively-manufactured Fe–Mn alloys",
abstract = "In this paper, we describe the effects of different scanning speeds (600–900 mm/s) on the microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of biodegradable bone-substitution alloys produced from 80:20 (by wt.) Fe:Mn powders using laser powder bed fusion (LPBF). Both the Mn content (18.9–15.1 wt.% Mn) and density (7920–7730 kg/m3) of the LPBFed samples decreased slightly with increasing laser scanning speed, while the oxygen content increased (0.12–0.40 wt.%). Increasing scanning speed also led to increased porosity (from 0.27% to 2.5%) and increased cracking. The specimen produced at the lowest scanning speed of 600 mm/s, which consisted of only the HCP ε-martensite phase, showed by far the highest yield strength (YS) at 644 MPa and the highest ultimate tensile strength (UTS) at 857 MPa, but the lowest elongation to failure (El) of only 13.7%. Specimens produced at higher scanning rates consisted of both BCC α′-martensite and ε-martensite phases. The sample fabricated at a scanning speed of 700 mm/s showed the best balance of mechanical properties with a YS of 330 MPa, a UTS of 839 MPa, and an El of 36.1%. Electrochemical testing showed corrosion rates from 0.09 mm/yr (600 mm/s specimen) to 0.22 mm/yr (700 mm/s specimen), which are higher than those of both pure Fe and most Fe–30Mn and Fe–35Mn alloys reported in the literature. The work demonstrates that the meso-/micro-scale structure, and, hence, the mechanical properties and corrosion rates of Fe–Mn alloys can be tailored by varying the scanning speed during LPBF processing. It also demonstrates the potential of LPBFed Fe–Mn alloys with low Mn content for use as biodegradable bone substitutes.",
keywords = "Biodegradable alloys, Laser powder bed fusion, Fe–Mn alloy, Strength-ductility combination, Corrosion rate",
author = "Peifeng Liu and Hong Wu and Luxin Liang and Deye Song and Jingbo Liu and Xueru Ma and Kaiyang Li and Qihong Fang and Yingtao Tian and Ian Baker",
year = "2022",
month = sep,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1016/j.msea.2022.143585",
language = "English",
volume = "852",
journal = "Materials Science and Engineering: A",
issn = "0921-5093",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of additively-manufactured Fe–Mn alloys

AU - Liu, Peifeng

AU - Wu, Hong

AU - Liang, Luxin

AU - Song, Deye

AU - Liu, Jingbo

AU - Ma, Xueru

AU - Li, Kaiyang

AU - Fang, Qihong

AU - Tian, Yingtao

AU - Baker, Ian

PY - 2022/9/5

Y1 - 2022/9/5

N2 - In this paper, we describe the effects of different scanning speeds (600–900 mm/s) on the microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of biodegradable bone-substitution alloys produced from 80:20 (by wt.) Fe:Mn powders using laser powder bed fusion (LPBF). Both the Mn content (18.9–15.1 wt.% Mn) and density (7920–7730 kg/m3) of the LPBFed samples decreased slightly with increasing laser scanning speed, while the oxygen content increased (0.12–0.40 wt.%). Increasing scanning speed also led to increased porosity (from 0.27% to 2.5%) and increased cracking. The specimen produced at the lowest scanning speed of 600 mm/s, which consisted of only the HCP ε-martensite phase, showed by far the highest yield strength (YS) at 644 MPa and the highest ultimate tensile strength (UTS) at 857 MPa, but the lowest elongation to failure (El) of only 13.7%. Specimens produced at higher scanning rates consisted of both BCC α′-martensite and ε-martensite phases. The sample fabricated at a scanning speed of 700 mm/s showed the best balance of mechanical properties with a YS of 330 MPa, a UTS of 839 MPa, and an El of 36.1%. Electrochemical testing showed corrosion rates from 0.09 mm/yr (600 mm/s specimen) to 0.22 mm/yr (700 mm/s specimen), which are higher than those of both pure Fe and most Fe–30Mn and Fe–35Mn alloys reported in the literature. The work demonstrates that the meso-/micro-scale structure, and, hence, the mechanical properties and corrosion rates of Fe–Mn alloys can be tailored by varying the scanning speed during LPBF processing. It also demonstrates the potential of LPBFed Fe–Mn alloys with low Mn content for use as biodegradable bone substitutes.

AB - In this paper, we describe the effects of different scanning speeds (600–900 mm/s) on the microstructure, mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of biodegradable bone-substitution alloys produced from 80:20 (by wt.) Fe:Mn powders using laser powder bed fusion (LPBF). Both the Mn content (18.9–15.1 wt.% Mn) and density (7920–7730 kg/m3) of the LPBFed samples decreased slightly with increasing laser scanning speed, while the oxygen content increased (0.12–0.40 wt.%). Increasing scanning speed also led to increased porosity (from 0.27% to 2.5%) and increased cracking. The specimen produced at the lowest scanning speed of 600 mm/s, which consisted of only the HCP ε-martensite phase, showed by far the highest yield strength (YS) at 644 MPa and the highest ultimate tensile strength (UTS) at 857 MPa, but the lowest elongation to failure (El) of only 13.7%. Specimens produced at higher scanning rates consisted of both BCC α′-martensite and ε-martensite phases. The sample fabricated at a scanning speed of 700 mm/s showed the best balance of mechanical properties with a YS of 330 MPa, a UTS of 839 MPa, and an El of 36.1%. Electrochemical testing showed corrosion rates from 0.09 mm/yr (600 mm/s specimen) to 0.22 mm/yr (700 mm/s specimen), which are higher than those of both pure Fe and most Fe–30Mn and Fe–35Mn alloys reported in the literature. The work demonstrates that the meso-/micro-scale structure, and, hence, the mechanical properties and corrosion rates of Fe–Mn alloys can be tailored by varying the scanning speed during LPBF processing. It also demonstrates the potential of LPBFed Fe–Mn alloys with low Mn content for use as biodegradable bone substitutes.

KW - Biodegradable alloys

KW - Laser powder bed fusion

KW - Fe–Mn alloy

KW - Strength-ductility combination

KW - Corrosion rate

U2 - 10.1016/j.msea.2022.143585

DO - 10.1016/j.msea.2022.143585

M3 - Journal article

VL - 852

JO - Materials Science and Engineering: A

JF - Materials Science and Engineering: A

SN - 0921-5093

M1 - 143585

ER -