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Dynamic behaviour of high strength steel parts developed through laser assisted direct metal deposition

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-26, 13:52 authored by Syed Riza, Syed MasoodSyed Masood, Cuie Wen, Dong RuanDong Ruan, Shanqing XuShanqing Xu
High strength steel alloys are good candidates for many engineering applications particularly those involving high strains and impact loads. Such applications in energy absorption devices require materials that can sustain dynamic loading and remain strong under demanding conditions. But the processing cost of these alloys has been a prohibitive factor, thus re-enforcing the research on porous and cellular structures made of stainless steels. Direct metal deposition (DMD) is a process which employs the power of a CO2 laser to melt and deposit metallic powders onto steel substrates. Such structures offer advantages of creating novel configurations only by computer control of laser “tool path”. This research investigates the mechanical behaviour of solid and porous parts with prismatic cavities under quasi-static and dynamic compressive loading. Apart from two main deficiencies of relatively large variations of properties among the test specimen and sufficiently low modulus of elasticity, the stress strain behaviour is very close to the commercial grades of stainless steel produced by rolling and forming. The energy absorption behaviour of porous specimen is also very encouraging and renders DMD as a suitable process for manufacturing of customized sandwich and graded structures that can be used as a substitution for many engineering applications such as monolithic compression plates and explosion shields.

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0261-3069

Journal title

Materials & Design

Volume

64

Pagination

9 pp

Publisher

Elsevier

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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