The anisotropic grain size effect on the mechanical response of polycrystals: The role of columnar grain morphology in additively manufactured metals
S. Amir H. Motaman, Dilay Kibaroglu

TL;DR
This study introduces axial grain size and anisotropy descriptors to analyze how complex, columnar grain morphologies in additively manufactured metals influence their anisotropic mechanical response, revealing an inverse square relation.
Contribution
It presents novel morphological descriptors and a modeling approach to quantify the impact of anisotropic grain size on mechanical anisotropy in AM metals.
Findings
Grain size anisotropy significantly affects mechanical response.
An inverse square relation describes the contribution of anisotropic grain size.
The descriptors effectively represent complex AM microstructures.
Abstract
Additively manufactured (AM) metals exhibit highly complex microstructures, particularly with respect to grain morphology which typically features heterogeneous grain size distribution, anomalous and anisotropic grain shapes, and the so-called columnar grains. In general, the conventional morphological descriptors are not suitable to represent complex and anisotropic grain morphology of AM microstructures. The principal aspect of microstructural grain morphology is the state of grain boundary spacing or grain size whose effect on the mechanical response is known to be crucial. In this paper, we formally introduce the notions of axial grain size and grain size anisotropy as robust morphological descriptors which can concisely represent highly complex grain morphologies. We instantiated a discrete sample of polycrystalline aggregate as a representative volume element (RVE) which has…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdditive Manufacturing Materials and Processes · Additive Manufacturing and 3D Printing Technologies · Microstructure and mechanical properties
