Deutsch

A new approach to 3D printing has been published in a Nature journal

1219
2024-11-29 15:06:57
Übersetzung anzeigen

In the last century, the improvement of mechanical properties of structural metals was mainly achieved through the creation of increasingly complex chemical compositions. The complexity of this ingredient increases costs, creates supply fragility, and makes recycling more complex.

As a relatively new metal processing technology, metal 3D printing provides the possibility to re-examine and simplify alloy composition, achieve alloy simplification, and enable simpler materials to be widely used.

On November 21, 2024, Professor Zhang Mingxing from the University of Queensland and Professor Christopher Hutchinson from Monash University in Australia published a research paper titled "High performance plain carbon steel obtained through 3D printing" in the top international journal Nature Communications. Tan Qiyi and Haiwei Chang were co first authors of the paper, and Professor Zhang Mingxing and Professor Christopher Hutchinson were co corresponding authors.

Zhang Mingxing, Professor at the School of Mechanical and Mining Engineering, University of Queensland, Australia. I graduated from Baotou Iron and Steel Institute with a bachelor's degree in 1984. I obtained my master's and doctoral degrees from Northwestern Polytechnical University in 1987 and 1990. From 1990 to 1993, I taught at Baotou Iron and Steel Institute. In 1997, I obtained my doctoral degree from the University of Queensland. In 2000, I obtained my master's degree from Queensland University of Technology. Since 2003, I have been teaching at the University of Queensland.
Professor Zhang Mingxing's research interests include additive manufacturing of metals and MAX phase materials, high entropy alloys, new alloy design through machine learning, and the application of crystallography in engineering materials, metal surface engineering, and grain refinement of cast metals.

As of November 2019, he has published approximately 210 academic papers with an H impact factor of 46 and over 6600 citations, with 117 i10 impact factors. His papers have been published in internationally renowned journals such as Progress in Materials Science, Acta Materialia, Scripta Materialia, Corrosion Science, Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A/B, Applied Physics Letters, Journal of Applied Crystallography, Journal of Alloys and Compounds, and Materials&Design.

Here, the author demonstrates that high-performance ordinary carbon steel can be produced through 3D printing. The tensile and impact properties of the author's 3D printed ordinary carbon steel are comparable to or even better than ultra-high strength alloy steels such as martensitic aging steel.

The inherent continuous micro zone melting and rapid solidification of 3D printing provide sufficient cooling, which can directly form martensite and/or bainite, enhance the strength of steel, while maintaining the uniformity of microstructure and properties, without size limitations or heat treatment deformation and cracking.

By manipulating 3D printing parameters, researchers can adjust the microstructure to control the properties of customized applications.
This provides a scalable approach to reduce alloy complexity without compromising mechanical properties, and highlights the opportunity for 3D printing to help drive alloy simplification.


Figure 1: Hardenability and Metal 3D Printing of Ordinary Carbon Steel AISI 1080


Figure 2: Microstructure analysis of 3D printed 1080 steel


Figure 3: Microstructure analysis of 3D printed 1040 steel


Figure 4: Mechanical properties


In summary, this paper investigates the manufacturing of high-performance simple carbon steel through 3D printing technology and finds that the tensile and impact properties of this carbon steel can be comparable to or even superior to ultra-high strength alloy steel after 3D printing.
The research results indicate that 3D printing technology can simplify alloy composition, reduce costs and supply chain vulnerability, while improving material recyclability, which is of great significance for promoting the sustainable development and simplification of materials. This technology can provide a high-performance material solution for manufacturing high-strength, complex shaped structural components without the need for complex alloying; Due to the customization of material properties through 3D printing, it provides opportunities for specific industries such as aerospace, automotive manufacturing, and construction to optimize component design and performance.

Source: Yangtze River Delta Laser Alliance

Ähnliche Empfehlungen
  • UK to Build World's Largest Power Laser: Accelerating the Use of Nuclear Fusion and Promising to Obtain Clean Energy

    According to reports, British scientists will build the world's largest power laser. They hope that this £ 85 million (approximately $103 million) device can accelerate the use of nuclear fusion and potentially obtain clean energy, which is inexhaustible.According to the report, the "Vulcan" 20-20 laser will be built in Havel, Oxfordshire, and it will produce a laser brightness that is 24 t...

    2023-10-09
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • Trumpf collaborates with Mercedes Benz to focus on digital real-time laser maintenance

    In the era of smart factories, Mercedes Benz monitors all fast lasers in its global production network based on cloud, significantly improving system resilience and reducing the risk of machine downtime. The connection between the Mercedes Benz digital ecosystem MO360 and the Trumpf laser for digital prediction services has helped achieve very good dynamic maintenance, and achieved demand based ...

    2024-06-17
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • HGTECH Laser's New Product Debuts at the 2025 Munich Shanghai Light Expo

    New Product for Wafer Testing Probe Card Manufacturing Equipment Project This project adopts vision guided laser precision cutting to separate the probe from the crystal disk, and then generate a product mapping image for use in the next process. When picking up the probe, multi-point reference surface fitting technology is used to achieve non-contact probe suction and avoid force deformation. A...

    03-07
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • A new method of generating laser without the need for mirrors

    A new laser generation method: a laser without a reflector. This study, conducted by a team of physicists from the University of Innsbruck and Harvard University, shows that quantum emitters with spacing smaller than the wavelength can achieve constructive synchronization of photon emission, resulting in bright and extremely narrow bandwidth beams, even without any optical resonant cavities.The ac...

    10-30
    Übersetzung anzeigen
  • A major investment! Lumentum completes acquisition of research and development site in Carswell, UK

    Lumentum, a leading designer and manufacturer of innovative optical and photonic products, has announced that it has completed the acquisition of a site in Caswell, UK.Lumentum revealed that it has made significant investments in the site over the past two years and is currently undergoing development upgrades for its state-of-the-art cleanrooms and laboratories to continue to support the developm...

    2023-09-13
    Übersetzung anzeigen