Enhanced thermal coarsening resistance in a nanostructured aluminum-cerium alloy produced by additive manufacturing

Hunter B. Henderson(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Joshua A. Hammons(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Alexander A. Baker(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), S. McCall(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Tian T. Li(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Aurélien Perron(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Zachary C. Sims(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory), Ryan Ott(Ames National Laboratory), Fanqiang Meng(Ames National Laboratory), M. J. Thompson(University of Tennessee at Knoxville), David Weiss, Orlando Rios(University of Tennessee at Knoxville)
Materials & Design
July 15, 2021
Cited by 67Open Access
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Abstract

Decreasing microstructural length scales to the nanoscale is a proven way of increasing strength, but the intrinsic metastability of such structures typically makes them susceptible to thermally activated coarsening. Recent advances in additive manufacturing permit bulk-nanostructured materials to be produced through rapid solidification, but like other metastable materials the as-built structures typically coarsen rapidly with even modest thermal exposure. Here, selective laser melting is employed to produce an Al-Ce-based alloy with high mechanical strength arising from the as-built microstructure, which can be controlled by build conditions. In addition, the alloy exhibits extreme resistance to thermal coarsening up to 400 °C and superior strength retention compared to conventional Al alloys after extended thermal exposure. The near-zero solubility of Ce in Al and potent solid solution strengthening of Mg enable this behavior without requiring heat treatment. This result demonstrates that combining insoluble alloying elements with additive manufacturing is a viable method of producing exceptionally stable bulk nanoscale alloys.


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