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New Nomenclatures for Heat Treatments of Additively Manufactured Titanium Alloys
Author(s) -
Andrew Baker,
Peter C. Collins,
James C. Williams
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
jom
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.67
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1543-1851
pISSN - 1047-4838
DOI - 10.1007/s11837-017-2358-y
Subject(s) - forging , materials science , microstructure , metallurgy , annealing (glass) , titanium , titanium alloy , thermomechanical processing , casting , alloy
The heat-treatment designations and microstructure nomenclatures for many structural metallic alloys were established for traditional metals processing, such as casting, hot rolling or forging. These terms do not necessarily apply for additively manufactured (i.e., three-dimensionally printed or “3D printed”) metallic structures. The heat-treatment terminology for titanium alloys generally implies the heat-treatment temperatures and their sequence relative to a thermomechanical processing step (e.g., forging, rolling). These designations include: β-processing, α + β-processing, β-annealing, duplex annealing and mill annealing. Owing to the absence of a thermomechanical processing step, these traditional designations can pose a problem when titanium alloys are first produced via additive manufacturing, and then heat-treated. This communication proposes new nomenclatures for heat treatments of additively manufactured titanium alloys, and uses the distinct microstructural features to provide a correlation between traditional nomenclature and the proposed nomenclature.

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