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Metal AM for High Temperature Applications



The aerospace sector has long been recognized as an early adopter when it comes to cutting-edge technology inventions, and as such it is unsurprising that the use of additive manufacturing (AM) as a production tool is relatively familiar in many of the leading aerospace OEMS and their supply chains.

The sector is typically not a mass production industry, but is instead characterized by complex low-volume manufacture, which plays directly to the strengths of metal AM-and specifically the Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) process-when compared with traditional metal manufacturing processes. In an area that is highly competitive, where conventional manufacturing processes are costly, especially for metal components produced in relatively low volumes, and with supply chains constantly under pressure to conform to ever more stringent environmental performance restrictions, the aerospace sector needs to become more agile. Metal AM processes, with the ability to manufacture innovative geometrically complex parts in a timely, local and cost-effective way, have a huge part to play.

AM in Aerospace

AM's disruptive potential for the aerospace sector is widely acknowledged, holding out the opportunity to break the typical compromise between scale and scope in manufacturing first by reducing the capital expenditure required to achieve economies of scale, and second by increasing the variety of designs that a given amount of capital expenditure can produce. One AM platform can at the same time build a number of complicated parts with variable designs. This means that large centralized factories with assembly lines are not always required, and with AM complexity, production changeovers and customization are cheaper.

As AM technologies continue to develop and secure a stronger foothold in production scenarios, there is simultaneous development ongoing across the sector to refine associated parts of the AM ecosystem, with a great deal of emphasis being placed on in-process monitoring for traceability and validation purposes, as well as automated post-processing technologies. A further, vital area of development is materials, particularly metal powders for AM that meet-and exceed-the functionality and performance of existing production materials as well as meeting the requirements of specific applications.

Alloys for High Temperature Applications

It is fair to say that, to date, metal AM processes have not performed well with the highest temperature materials-that is to say, materials for components that operate at the top of the temperature range within jet turbines. In the aerospace sector such applications would include, but are not limited to, the critical areas of a turbine engine such as the back-end of the compressor, the combustor, the high and low pressure turbine areas and the exhaust. All parts in these areas of the engine are exposed to high temperatures and higher levels of oxidation.

For such high temperature applications, the aerospace sector typically uses nickel (Ni) alloys such as IN738, IN713 and MarM247. However, these alloys are incompatible with welding techniques due to their chemistry, because they do not respond well to rapid thermal gradient changes and it is virtually impossible to control the amount of cracking during the weld process. Therefore, these alloys have historically been processed using casting methods where the cooling rates are relatively low.

This is the conundrum facing users of metal AM within the aerospace sector looking to capitalize on the advantages that the process has to offer for high temperature applications. It is this that has driven further exploration of alternative materials that could replace traditional high temperature alloys without compromising structural integrity while at the same time being compatible with AM. The advantages of AM-compatible alloys for high temperature applications derive from the fact that the components assembled in hot sections of engines are usually some of the most expensive, and due to the harsh environment in which they work have short life-cycles. Using the L-PBF process with high temperature alloys offers manufacturers the opportunity to benefit from better inventory management, reducing late penalties due to tooling delays and creating more intricate shapes, often allowing the integration of several components in a sub-assembly into one.

It was to address this requirement that Alloyed worked with leading aerospace OEM Honeywell to test a new high temperature nickel alloy, ABD 900AM, with the L-PBF process to determine if it could serve as a replacement for existing high temperature casting alloys. The purpose of this effort was to discover at a high level if ABD 900AM showed promise and warranted further development.

Honeywell and Alloyed Collaboration

Honeywell Aerospace has a long and rich heritage of innovation that spans more than a century. The company has one of the industry's broadest and most advanced portfolios including world-class engines, cockpits, cabin design, wireless connectivity and enterprise performance management services.

Honeywell first engaged with metal AM processes in 2007 when the company had several prototype parts manufactured by external vendors. Over the ensuing years, the company has continued to assess and implement the technology for applications where there is a need for a rapidly manufactured metal parts, including for test bed components. In 2014, led by the efforts of Engineering Fellow Donald Godfrey, the company opened its first $5 million AM facility in Phoenix, AZ, with a focus on L-PBF and electron beam PBF technologies. In the same year AM facilities were also opened in Bangalore and the Czech Republic.

Today, the Honeywell AM operations have grown significantly in both size and capacity and incorporate tensile, LCF and creep testing equipment, powder characterization equipment and a vacuum furnace for stress relief and heat treatment. In Arizona, more L-PBF machines were added in 2020, and now the lab is fully equipped to manage end-to-end powder and mechanical characterization, pre-production builds and a full range of R&D activities.

Honeywell is using the pilot-production facility as a means to either develop parts for production that will be sent to a supplier for manufacturing or working with a supplier to cooperate in the development of components for production.

As an organization, Honeywell collaborates with universities and companies around the world with the intent of developing new technology and exploring new technologies as they emerge. After an initial introduction to Alloyed by a third party, Honeywell recognized the potential of the Alloys By Design (ABD) system brand developed by highly respected metallurgists from Oxford University and this stimulated further interest in the ABD 900AM material and its potential for high temperature aerospace applications since it was not prone to cracking.

The result of this initial collaboration was a dedicated project that would see Honeywell build a limited number of test specimens in its AM laboratory located in Bangalore, India. Honeywell would build and test the material to determine if the results merited continued investment and development.

ABD 900AM

ABD 900AM is an age-hardenable, nickel-based superalloy designed specifically for use as feedstock in the L-PBF process. It is optimized for environmental resistance and high-temperature tensile strength, with a working temperature range up to 900 °C (1,652 °F) in its age-hardened state. ABD 900AM not only offers a higher operating temperature but also significant long-term stability.

Exhibiting excellent creep strength, ABD 900AM has also demonstrated superior resistance to cracking during manufacture and heat treatment, enabling complex part design. It is designed to be free of solidification, liquidation and strain-age cracks, and showcases exceptional printability for a 40% y'-phase strengthened alloy. The ABD 900AM alloy also shows high as-printed part density of >99.9%.

Test Results

The scope of the collaborative project between Alloyed and Honeywell was the assessment/qualification of the ABD 900AM Ni-alloy powder for the next generation of additively manufactured high temperature applications. Honeywell has undertaken a series of tests to confirm and optimize the properties of the alloy with some extremely positive results.

Manufacturing Assessment

From a broad perspective, the project provided a manufacturing assessment and a mechanical property assessment of the alloy.

It was important to assess how the alloy behaved when processed on a L-PBF machine, and whether the welding operation involved would deleteriously affect the integrity of the final part. Various test geometries were tested on an EOS metal system, and component scale testing was undertaken. It was found that there was no part distortion on cracking in the as-printed condition, there was good surface finish and a wide processing window.

The ability to be able to re-use unsintered material from build to build is obviously an important factor when looking at the economics of using metal AM processes. Because of this, it was decided to manufacture and test parts made with "used" powder, and it was found that there was no significant change of properties in the parts made with used powder compared with unused ABD 900AM powder.

It is often the case that parts must undergo a variety of post-processing activities after the AM build, which can affect the mechanical properties of the material and therefore, the functionality of the part. To assess how ABD 900AM behaved parts were subjected to vacuum heat treatment and Hot Isostatic Pressing (HIP) often used on metal AM parts to eliminate internal voids. There was no post-weld cracking detected on parts made from ABD 900AM.

Mechanical Property Assessment

ASTM standard tensile tests were undertaken on the ABD 900AM parts' measuring tensile strength, breaking strength, maximum elongation and reduction in area between 427 °C and 927 °C in both build directions. The test showed good repeatability of test points, with high temperature strength of the ABD 900AM comparable with legacy cast nickel alloys that cannot be manufactured crack-free in AM.

Low cycle fatigue (LCF) is low-cycle endurance testing where components are subject to mechanical cyclic plastic strains that cause fatigue failure within a short number of cycles. ABD 900AM was subjected to LCF testing at 650 °C, the results showing that Non-HIP-ed ABD 900AM had superior performance to HIP-ed alloy 718.

Summary

The results of the work between Alloyed and Honeywell show that ABD 900AM is an alloy that demonstrates great potential for high temperature applications. The material welds and fuses extremely well, particularly when compared with other high temperature nickel alloys. While ABD 900AM is not a replacement for CM Mar-247 in most cases due to the oxidation capabilities, it does exhibit very good mechanical properties at high temperatures when compared with Mar 247 or IN792 or IN713 or IN738.

Alloyed offers a unique stack of technologies for the manufacture of advanced metal components by additive and traditional means. The company has developed and uses a proprietary computational platform and advanced materials modeling to search for the right alloy composition for any application and process. Alloyed's turn-key solution provides technology at every scale from alloy composition, material engineering and part design through to scale for mass production.

Authored by Will Dick-Cleland, Process Technology Team, Alloyed

For more information contact:

Alloyed

contact@alloyed.com

www.alloyed.com

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