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Multiscale Modeling of Metal Additive Manufacturing : = Investigation into Dendritic Solidification, Meltpool Dynamics, and Microstructure Evolution.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Multiscale Modeling of Metal Additive Manufacturing :/
Reminder of title:
Investigation into Dendritic Solidification, Meltpool Dynamics, and Microstructure Evolution.
Author:
Bhagat, Kunal.
Description:
1 online resource (158 pages)
Notes:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-12, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International84-12B.
Subject:
Mechanical engineering. -
Online resource:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30526752click for full text (PQDT)
ISBN:
9798379725860
Multiscale Modeling of Metal Additive Manufacturing : = Investigation into Dendritic Solidification, Meltpool Dynamics, and Microstructure Evolution.
Bhagat, Kunal.
Multiscale Modeling of Metal Additive Manufacturing :
Investigation into Dendritic Solidification, Meltpool Dynamics, and Microstructure Evolution. - 1 online resource (158 pages)
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-12, Section: B.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2023.
Includes bibliographical references
Microstructure evolution in metal additive manufacturing (AM) is a complex multi-physics and multi-scale problem. Understanding the impact of AM process conditions on the microstructure evolution and the resulting mechanical properties of the printed part is an active area of research. The investigation into understanding the microstructure evolution under AM conditions, at different length scales, is done as a three-part research program that is presented in this thesis.In the first part, a high-fidelity numerical method at the mesoscale to model varied dendritic solidification morphologies is developed. A numerical framework encompassing the modeling of Stefan problem formulations relevant to dendritic evolution using a phase-field approach and a finite element method implementation is presented. Using this framework, numerous complex dendritic morphologies that are physically relevant to the solidification of pure melts and binary alloys are modeled. To the best of our knowledge, this is a first-of-its-kind study of numerical convergence of the phase-field equations of dendritic growth in a finite element method setting. Further, using this numerical framework, various types of physically relevant dendritic solidification patterns like single equiaxed, multi-equiaxed, single-columnar, and multi-columnar dendrites are modeled in two-dimensional and three-dimensional computational domains. In the second part, the complex dynamics of meltpool formation during metal additive manufacturing are modeled using a thermo-fluidic numerical model. Statistical-based method of least-squares is exploited to characterize the role of dimensional numbers in the microstructure evolution process. A novel strategy using dimensional analysis and the method of linear least-squares regression to numerically investigate the thermo-fluidic governing equations of the Laser Powder Bed Fusion AM process is presented. First, the governing equations are solved using the finite element method, and the model predictions are validated with experimental and numerical results from the literature. Then, through dimensional analysis, an important dimensionless quantity - interpreted as a measure of heat absorbed by the powdered material and the meltpool, is identified. Key contributions of this work include the demonstration of the correlation between the dimensionless measure of heat absorbed, and classical dimensionless quantities such as Peclet, Marangoni, and Stefan numbers, with advective transport in the meltpool for different alloys, meltpool morphologies, and microstructure evolution-related variablesIn the third part, the influence on the morphology of evolving dendritic microstructure due to the rapid thermal cycle and fluid convection in the meltpool during metal additive manufacturing is investigated. A finite-element formulation that solves a coupled Navier-Stokes flow model and a phase-field model of dendritic solidification is developed. Microstructure evolution modeled using purely heat and mass diffusion process may not capture the entire spectrum of the dendrite morphology observed in metal additive manufacturing. The impact of flow dynamics on the thermal gradients and momentum transfer that modulate dendritic shapes, along with the associated remelting are modeled using a coupled phase-field model of solidification. Further, the morphological changes to dendrites in the solidifying region beneath the meltpool fusion line are modeled by accounting for convective effects in the mass and heat diffusion process in equiaxed, aligned equiaxed, and columnar dendrite growth for a pure metal and binary alloys. It is observed that for a meltpool formed under high laser power and scan speed conditions, where Marangoni convection is significant, enhanced growth of the secondary arms of columnar dendrite occurs as compared to dendrite growth observed in low convection regions of the meltpool.
Electronic reproduction.
Ann Arbor, Mich. :
ProQuest,
2023
Mode of access: World Wide Web
ISBN: 9798379725860Subjects--Topical Terms:
649730
Mechanical engineering.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Adaptive meshingIndex Terms--Genre/Form:
542853
Electronic books.
Multiscale Modeling of Metal Additive Manufacturing : = Investigation into Dendritic Solidification, Meltpool Dynamics, and Microstructure Evolution.
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Investigation into Dendritic Solidification, Meltpool Dynamics, and Microstructure Evolution.
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Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 84-12, Section: B.
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Advisor: Rudraraju, Shiva.
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Includes bibliographical references
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Microstructure evolution in metal additive manufacturing (AM) is a complex multi-physics and multi-scale problem. Understanding the impact of AM process conditions on the microstructure evolution and the resulting mechanical properties of the printed part is an active area of research. The investigation into understanding the microstructure evolution under AM conditions, at different length scales, is done as a three-part research program that is presented in this thesis.In the first part, a high-fidelity numerical method at the mesoscale to model varied dendritic solidification morphologies is developed. A numerical framework encompassing the modeling of Stefan problem formulations relevant to dendritic evolution using a phase-field approach and a finite element method implementation is presented. Using this framework, numerous complex dendritic morphologies that are physically relevant to the solidification of pure melts and binary alloys are modeled. To the best of our knowledge, this is a first-of-its-kind study of numerical convergence of the phase-field equations of dendritic growth in a finite element method setting. Further, using this numerical framework, various types of physically relevant dendritic solidification patterns like single equiaxed, multi-equiaxed, single-columnar, and multi-columnar dendrites are modeled in two-dimensional and three-dimensional computational domains. In the second part, the complex dynamics of meltpool formation during metal additive manufacturing are modeled using a thermo-fluidic numerical model. Statistical-based method of least-squares is exploited to characterize the role of dimensional numbers in the microstructure evolution process. A novel strategy using dimensional analysis and the method of linear least-squares regression to numerically investigate the thermo-fluidic governing equations of the Laser Powder Bed Fusion AM process is presented. First, the governing equations are solved using the finite element method, and the model predictions are validated with experimental and numerical results from the literature. Then, through dimensional analysis, an important dimensionless quantity - interpreted as a measure of heat absorbed by the powdered material and the meltpool, is identified. Key contributions of this work include the demonstration of the correlation between the dimensionless measure of heat absorbed, and classical dimensionless quantities such as Peclet, Marangoni, and Stefan numbers, with advective transport in the meltpool for different alloys, meltpool morphologies, and microstructure evolution-related variablesIn the third part, the influence on the morphology of evolving dendritic microstructure due to the rapid thermal cycle and fluid convection in the meltpool during metal additive manufacturing is investigated. A finite-element formulation that solves a coupled Navier-Stokes flow model and a phase-field model of dendritic solidification is developed. Microstructure evolution modeled using purely heat and mass diffusion process may not capture the entire spectrum of the dendrite morphology observed in metal additive manufacturing. The impact of flow dynamics on the thermal gradients and momentum transfer that modulate dendritic shapes, along with the associated remelting are modeled using a coupled phase-field model of solidification. Further, the morphological changes to dendrites in the solidifying region beneath the meltpool fusion line are modeled by accounting for convective effects in the mass and heat diffusion process in equiaxed, aligned equiaxed, and columnar dendrite growth for a pure metal and binary alloys. It is observed that for a meltpool formed under high laser power and scan speed conditions, where Marangoni convection is significant, enhanced growth of the secondary arms of columnar dendrite occurs as compared to dendrite growth observed in low convection regions of the meltpool.
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click for full text (PQDT)
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