Finite Element Analysis and Computational Fluid Dynamics Verification of Molten Pool Characteristics During Selective Laser Melting of Ti-6Al-4V Plates.
Lv DuWu-Gui JiangGao-Gui XuQing-Hua QinDuo-Sheng LiPublished in: 3D printing and additive manufacturing (2023)
The finite element (FE) method is used to characterize the thermal gradient, solidification rate, and molten pool sizes of Ti-6Al-4V plates in the process of selective laser melting (SLM). The results are verified by using the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation. The proposed FE model contains a series of toolpath information that is directly converted from a G-code file, including hatch spacing, laser power, layer thickness, dwell time, and scanning speed generated by using Slic3r software from a CAD file. A proposed multi-layer, multi-track FE model is used to investigate the influence of the laser power, scanning speed, and scanning path on the microstructure in the Ti-6Al-4V plate built via SLM. The processing window is also determined based on the proposed FE model. The FE results indicate that, with a decrease in the laser power and an increase in the scanning speed, the morphology of the crystal grains, showing fully columnar crystals, gradually deviates from the fully equiaxed region. The formed grains are dependent on the laser power, scanning speed, and deposition position, but they are not sensitive to the scanning path, and with the deposition from the bottom layer to the top layer, the size of the formed grains is gradually increasing, which shows a good agreement with the experimental results.