{"title":"Deciphering mechanical heterogeneity of additively manufactured martensitic steel using high throughput nanoindentation combined with machine learning","authors":"","doi":"10.1016/j.addma.2024.104408","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>Microstructures of additively manufactured (AM) materials are highly heterogeneous, periodic, and hierarchical at various length scales, leading to complex mechanical response. In this study, nanoindentation trend analysis combined with machine learning (ML) was used to unravel the hierarchical and heterogeneous microstructures and associated multiscale mechanical responses in a laser-directed energy deposited low-alloy martensitic steel. At length scale encompassing several melt pools, periodic hardness fluctuations were attributed to variation in strain accommodation and phase transformation during primary solidification and thermal reheat cycles between the melt pools. The observed trends were a net balance between dislocation accumulation due to volume contraction during liquid to austenite solidification, and relaxation due to subsequent solid-state martensitic transformation during cooling. The hardness trends within a single melt pool (250–300 µm) were ascribed to cooling rate variations which manifests in form of changes in primary dendritic arm spacing. The inter-dendritic regions enriched with Cr and Mo demonstrated higher elastic modulus and hardness. In microstructural scale, variation in pop-in behavior in the nanoindentation load-displacement (<em>P-h</em>) curves was correlated to local microstructural heterogeneity in the indenter-material interaction volume (dendritic segregation + martensite matrix) using various ML-based classification techniques: decision tree, support vector machine and neural network. It classified the indentations into three broad categories: first set showing only one pop-in lying within the segregation channel with 10,000 <<em>P/h</em>< 13,000 N/m, while the second set with <em>P/h</em> <10,000 N/m lied on the matrix and third set with <em>P/h</em> >13,000 N/m with multiple popins lied on the matrix-segrgeation interface. This novel multimodal structure-property correlative framework, integrating nanoindentation trend analysis with ML, provides a high-throughput approach to unravel the complex mechanical behavior of AM materials across multiple length scales, representing a key advancement in the field.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":7172,"journal":{"name":"Additive manufacturing","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":10.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Additive manufacturing","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214860424004548","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"工程技术","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, MANUFACTURING","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Microstructures of additively manufactured (AM) materials are highly heterogeneous, periodic, and hierarchical at various length scales, leading to complex mechanical response. In this study, nanoindentation trend analysis combined with machine learning (ML) was used to unravel the hierarchical and heterogeneous microstructures and associated multiscale mechanical responses in a laser-directed energy deposited low-alloy martensitic steel. At length scale encompassing several melt pools, periodic hardness fluctuations were attributed to variation in strain accommodation and phase transformation during primary solidification and thermal reheat cycles between the melt pools. The observed trends were a net balance between dislocation accumulation due to volume contraction during liquid to austenite solidification, and relaxation due to subsequent solid-state martensitic transformation during cooling. The hardness trends within a single melt pool (250–300 µm) were ascribed to cooling rate variations which manifests in form of changes in primary dendritic arm spacing. The inter-dendritic regions enriched with Cr and Mo demonstrated higher elastic modulus and hardness. In microstructural scale, variation in pop-in behavior in the nanoindentation load-displacement (P-h) curves was correlated to local microstructural heterogeneity in the indenter-material interaction volume (dendritic segregation + martensite matrix) using various ML-based classification techniques: decision tree, support vector machine and neural network. It classified the indentations into three broad categories: first set showing only one pop-in lying within the segregation channel with 10,000 <P/h< 13,000 N/m, while the second set with P/h <10,000 N/m lied on the matrix and third set with P/h >13,000 N/m with multiple popins lied on the matrix-segrgeation interface. This novel multimodal structure-property correlative framework, integrating nanoindentation trend analysis with ML, provides a high-throughput approach to unravel the complex mechanical behavior of AM materials across multiple length scales, representing a key advancement in the field.
增材制造(AM)材料的微结构在不同长度尺度上具有高度异质性、周期性和层次性,从而导致复杂的机械响应。在本研究中,纳米压痕趋势分析与机器学习(ML)相结合,揭示了激光能量沉积低合金马氏体钢的分层和异质微观结构以及相关的多尺度机械响应。在包含多个熔池的长度尺度上,周期性的硬度波动归因于熔池间一次凝固和热再热循环过程中应变容纳和相变的变化。观察到的趋势是液态到奥氏体凝固过程中体积收缩导致的位错累积与冷却过程中随后的固态马氏体转变导致的松弛之间的净平衡。单个熔池(250-300 微米)内的硬度趋势归因于冷却速率的变化,这种变化表现为主树枝状臂间距的变化。富含铬和钼的树枝状晶间区域显示出更高的弹性模量和硬度。在微观结构尺度上,纳米压痕载荷-位移(P-h)曲线中的弹入行为变化与压头-材料相互作用体积(树枝状偏析+马氏体基体)中的局部微观结构异质性相关联,采用了各种基于多元素分析的分类技术:决策树、支持向量机和神经网络。它将压痕分为三大类:第一类是在偏析通道内只有一个压入点,P/h为10,000 N/m;第二类是在基体上,P/h为10,000 N/m;第三类是在基体-偏析界面上,P/h为13,000 N/m,有多个压入点。这种新颖的多模态结构-性能相关框架将纳米压痕趋势分析与 ML 相结合,提供了一种高通量方法来揭示 AM 材料在多个长度尺度上的复杂力学行为,是该领域的一项重要进步。
期刊介绍:
Additive Manufacturing stands as a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to delivering high-quality research papers and reviews in the field of additive manufacturing, serving both academia and industry leaders. The journal's objective is to recognize the innovative essence of additive manufacturing and its diverse applications, providing a comprehensive overview of current developments and future prospects.
The transformative potential of additive manufacturing technologies in product design and manufacturing is poised to disrupt traditional approaches. In response to this paradigm shift, a distinctive and comprehensive publication outlet was essential. Additive Manufacturing fulfills this need, offering a platform for engineers, materials scientists, and practitioners across academia and various industries to document and share innovations in these evolving technologies.