Investigation of Heat Treatment Strategies for Additively-Manufactured Tools of X37CrMoV5-1

For cost-intensive products like automobiles, clients often with to personalize their product; this forces the industry to create a large diversity of combinable parts. Additionally, the life cycles of many components become shorter. For highly-stressable parts, which are commonly manufactured by fo...

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Main Authors: Daniel Junker, Oliver Hentschel, Michael Schmidt, Marion Merklein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Metals
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/8/10/854
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spelling doaj-2d5ca88d7ed34f8cad63f031a79d39e72020-11-25T00:29:48ZengMDPI AGMetals2075-47012018-10-0181085410.3390/met8100854met8100854Investigation of Heat Treatment Strategies for Additively-Manufactured Tools of X37CrMoV5-1Daniel Junker0Oliver Hentschel1Michael Schmidt2Marion Merklein3Institute of Manufacturing Technology, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Egerlandstr. 13, 91058 Erlangen, GermanyInstitute of Photonic Technologies, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Konrad-Zuse-Str. 3, 91052 Erlangen, GermanyInstitute of Photonic Technologies, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Konrad-Zuse-Str. 3, 91052 Erlangen, GermanyInstitute of Manufacturing Technology, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Egerlandstr. 13, 91058 Erlangen, GermanyFor cost-intensive products like automobiles, clients often with to personalize their product; this forces the industry to create a large diversity of combinable parts. Additionally, the life cycles of many components become shorter. For highly-stressable parts, which are commonly manufactured by forging, the short changeover cycles result in expensive products, as the costs of tools must be offset by the sale of only a few parts. To reduce the tool cost, new, flexible processes have to be established in tool manufacturing. Laser-based additive manufacturing is noted for its high flexibility; notably, Laser Metal Deposition (LMD) is gaining increasing relevance in research, as it is already used for coating and repairing forming tools; this technology makes it possible to add material onto free-formed surfaces. Therefore, investigations are being conducted to qualify this process to produce forging tools. Due to the thermal processes which are required during additive manufacturing, the microstructure of the material differs from that of wrought material. This, in turn, affects the strategy of post heat treatment in order that the required mechanical properties for tools be attained. Within this manuscript, the influence of additive manufacturing on performance characteristics of hot work tool steel X37CrMoV5-1 (1.2343) is analyzed. To investigate the behavior of additive manufactured material during the process chain of tool manufacturing, properties for different states of a heat treatment are characterized by hardness and strength. It was shown that the strength of the additive manufactured material could be increased compared to wrought material by using a tailored heat treatment. The effects that cause this behavior are investigated by comparing the microstructure at different states of heat treatment.http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/8/10/854directed energy depositionheat treatmentmicrostructure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Junker
Oliver Hentschel
Michael Schmidt
Marion Merklein
spellingShingle Daniel Junker
Oliver Hentschel
Michael Schmidt
Marion Merklein
Investigation of Heat Treatment Strategies for Additively-Manufactured Tools of X37CrMoV5-1
Metals
directed energy deposition
heat treatment
microstructure
author_facet Daniel Junker
Oliver Hentschel
Michael Schmidt
Marion Merklein
author_sort Daniel Junker
title Investigation of Heat Treatment Strategies for Additively-Manufactured Tools of X37CrMoV5-1
title_short Investigation of Heat Treatment Strategies for Additively-Manufactured Tools of X37CrMoV5-1
title_full Investigation of Heat Treatment Strategies for Additively-Manufactured Tools of X37CrMoV5-1
title_fullStr Investigation of Heat Treatment Strategies for Additively-Manufactured Tools of X37CrMoV5-1
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of Heat Treatment Strategies for Additively-Manufactured Tools of X37CrMoV5-1
title_sort investigation of heat treatment strategies for additively-manufactured tools of x37crmov5-1
publisher MDPI AG
series Metals
issn 2075-4701
publishDate 2018-10-01
description For cost-intensive products like automobiles, clients often with to personalize their product; this forces the industry to create a large diversity of combinable parts. Additionally, the life cycles of many components become shorter. For highly-stressable parts, which are commonly manufactured by forging, the short changeover cycles result in expensive products, as the costs of tools must be offset by the sale of only a few parts. To reduce the tool cost, new, flexible processes have to be established in tool manufacturing. Laser-based additive manufacturing is noted for its high flexibility; notably, Laser Metal Deposition (LMD) is gaining increasing relevance in research, as it is already used for coating and repairing forming tools; this technology makes it possible to add material onto free-formed surfaces. Therefore, investigations are being conducted to qualify this process to produce forging tools. Due to the thermal processes which are required during additive manufacturing, the microstructure of the material differs from that of wrought material. This, in turn, affects the strategy of post heat treatment in order that the required mechanical properties for tools be attained. Within this manuscript, the influence of additive manufacturing on performance characteristics of hot work tool steel X37CrMoV5-1 (1.2343) is analyzed. To investigate the behavior of additive manufactured material during the process chain of tool manufacturing, properties for different states of a heat treatment are characterized by hardness and strength. It was shown that the strength of the additive manufactured material could be increased compared to wrought material by using a tailored heat treatment. The effects that cause this behavior are investigated by comparing the microstructure at different states of heat treatment.
topic directed energy deposition
heat treatment
microstructure
url http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/8/10/854
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