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Additive manufacturing of Inconel-625: from powder production to bulk samples printing

Asif Ur Rehman (R&D Department, ERMAKSAN, Bursa, Türkiye)
Burak Karakas (R&D Department, ERMAKSAN, Bursa, Türkiye)
Muhammad Arif Mahmood (Mechanical Engineering Program, Texas A&M University at Qatar, Doha, Qatar)
Berkan Başaran (R&D Department, ERMAKSAN, Bursa, Türkiye)
Rashid Ur Rehman (Department of Energy and Chemical Engineering, Incheon National University, Incheon, Republic of Korea)
Mertcan Kirac (R&D Department, ERMAKSAN, Bursa, Türkiye)
Marwan Khraisheh (Mechanical Engineering Program, Texas A&M University at Qatar, Doha, Qatar)
Metin Uymaz Salamci (Additive Manufacturing Technologies Research Center (EKTAM), Gazi University, Ankara, Türkiye and Department of Mechanical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Gazi University, Ankara, Türkiye)
Rahmi Ünal (Department of Mechanical Engineering, Gazi University, Ankara, Türkiye)

Rapid Prototyping Journal

ISSN: 1355-2546

Article publication date: 9 June 2023

Issue publication date: 18 October 2023

158

Abstract

Purpose

For metal additive manufacturing, metallic powders are usually produced by vacuum induction gas atomization (VIGA) through the breakup of liquid metal into tiny droplets by gas jets. VIGA is considered a cost-effective technique to prepare feedstock. In VIGA, the quality and the morphology of the produced particles are mainly controlled by the gas pressure used during powder production, keeping the setup configuration constant.

Design/methodology/approach

In VIGA process for metallic additive manufacturing feedstock preparation, the quality and morphology of the powder particles are mainly controlled by the gas pressure used during powder production.

Findings

In this study, Inconel-625 feedstock was produced using a supersonic nozzle in a close-coupled gas atomization apparatus. Powder size distribution (PSD) was studied by varying the gas pressure.

Originality/value

The nonmonotonic but deterministic relationships were observed between gas pressure and PSD. It was found that the maximum 15–45 µm percentage PSD, equivalent to 84%, was achieved at 29 bar Argon gas pressure, which is suitable for the LPBF process. Following on, the produced powder particles were used to print tensile test specimens via LPBF along XY- and ZX-orientations by using laser power = 475 W, laser scanning speed = 800 mm/s, powder layer thickness = 50 µm and hatch distance = 100 µm. The yield and tensile strengths were 9.45% and 13% higher than the ZX direction, while the samples printed in ZX direction resulted in 26.79% more elongation compared to XY-orientation.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Savunma Sanayii Başkanlığı (SSB)/Presidency of Defence Industries within the scope of the ATOM project, for INC 625 metal powder production. Authors would like to thank TEI – TUSAŞ Engine Industries, for tensile specimen production and testing.

Citation

Ur Rehman, A., Karakas, B., Mahmood, M.A., Başaran, B., Ur Rehman, R., Kirac, M., Khraisheh, M., Salamci, M.U. and Ünal, R. (2023), "Additive manufacturing of Inconel-625: from powder production to bulk samples printing", Rapid Prototyping Journal, Vol. 29 No. 9, pp. 1788-1799. https://doi.org/10.1108/RPJ-11-2022-0373

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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