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Application of Laboratory Diffraction Methods in Characterization of Elements Made By Additive SLM Methods – State of the Art Cover

Application of Laboratory Diffraction Methods in Characterization of Elements Made By Additive SLM Methods – State of the Art

Open Access
|Jul 2022

Abstract

The greatest challenge of widely developed incremental manufacturing methods today is to obtain, as a result of the manufacturing process, such components that will have acceptable strength properties from the point of view of a given application. These properties are indirectly determined by three key characteristics: the level of surface residual stress, the roughness of the component and its porosity. Currently, the efforts of many research groups are focused on the problem of optimizing the parameters of incremental manufacturing so as to achieve the appropriate level of compressive residual stress, the lowest possible porosity and the lowest possible roughness of parts obtained by 3D methods. It is now recognized that determining the level of these three parameters is potentially possible using experimental X-ray diffraction methods. The use of this type of radiation, admittedly, is only used to characterize the surface layer of elements, but its undoubted advantage is its easy availability and relatively low cost compared to experiments carried out using synchrotron or neutron radiation.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/fas-2021-0007 | Journal eISSN: 2300-7591 | Journal ISSN: 2081-7738
Language: English
Page range: 72 - 80
Published on: Jul 28, 2022
Published by: ŁUKASIEWICZ RESEARCH NETWORK – INSTITUTE OF AVIATION
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2022 Elżbieta Gadalińska, Łukasz Pawliszak, Grzegorz Moneta, published by ŁUKASIEWICZ RESEARCH NETWORK – INSTITUTE OF AVIATION
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.