Journal Articles

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://idr.nitk.ac.in/handle/123456789/19884

Browse

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 62
  • Item
    Additive manufacturing of magnesium alloys: Characterization and post-processing
    (KeAi Publishing Communications Ltd., 2024) Manjhi, S.K.; Sekar, P.; Bontha, S.; Balan, A.S.S.
    Magnesium and its alloys remain perilous in the framework of light weighting and advanced devices structure such as rockets and satellites. However, the utilization of Magnesium (Mg) is increasing every year, revealing growing demands in manufacturing industries. Manufacturing of Mg components is challenging because of their HCP crystal structure and limited ductility. In this context, additive manufacturing (AM) provides the flexibility to manufacture complex shape components with excellent dimensional stability. It also provides a new possibility for utilizing novel component structures that increase the applications for Mg alloy. This review herein pursues to holistically explore the additive manufacturing of Mg alloy with a synopsis of processes used and microstructure, mechanical properties, corrosion behaviour and postprocessing of AMed Mg alloy. The challenges and future scope of AMed Mg alloys are critically explored. © 2023 The Authors
  • Item
    Microstructure and corrosion behavior of laser processed NiTi alloy
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2015) Marattukalam, J.J.; Singh, A.K.; Datta, S.; Das, M.; Balla, V.K.; Bontha, S.; Kalpathy, S.K.
    Abstract Laser Engineered Net Shaping (LENS™), a commercially available additive manufacturing technology, has been used to fabricate dense equiatomic NiTi alloy components. The primary aim of this work is to study the effect of laser power and scan speed on microstructure, phase constituents, hardness and corrosion behavior of laser processed NiTi alloy. The results showed retention of large amount of high-temperature austenite phase at room temperature due to high cooling rates associated with laser processing. The high amount of austenite in these samples increased the hardness. The grain size and corrosion resistance were found to increase with laser power. The surface energy of NiTi alloy, calculated using contact angles, decreased from 61 mN/m to 56 mN/m with increase in laser energy density from 20 J/mm2 to 80 J/mm2. The decrease in surface energy shifted the corrosion potentials to nobler direction and decreased the corrosion current. Under present experimental conditions the laser power found to have strong influence on microstructure, phase constituents and corrosion resistance of NiTi alloy. © 2015 Elsevier B.V.
  • Item
    A Closed-Form Solution for the Effect of Free Edges on Melt Pool Geometry and Solidification Microstructure in Additive Manufacturing of Thin-Wall Geometries
    (Springer Boston, 2016) Gockel, J.; Klingbeil, N.; Bontha, S.
    Laser and electron beam-based additive manufacturing of Ti-6Al-4V are under consideration for application to aerospace components. A critical concern for these processes is the ability to obtain a consistent and desirable microstructure and corresponding mechanical properties of the deposit. Based on the Rosenthal solution for a moving point-heat source, recent work has developed simulation-based process maps for the thermal conditions controlling microstructure (grain size and morphology) in beam-based deposition of semi-infinite geometries, where a steady-state melt pool exists away from free edges. In the current study, the Rosenthal solution is modified to include the effects of free edges. This is accomplished by the superposition of two point-heat sources approaching one another, with the line of symmetry representing the free edge. The result is an exact solution for the case of temperature-independent properties. Dimensionless results for melt pool geometry are determined, and plotted as a function of distance from the free edge. Results are plotted on solidification maps to predict trends in microstructure for Ti-6Al-4V. Finite element analysis is used to verify results. Results suggest that melt pool geometry is more sensitive to free edges than solidification microstructure. © 2015, The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society and ASM International.
  • Item
    Solid state amorphization of Mg-Zn-Ca system via mechanical alloying and characterization
    (Elsevier B.V., 2017) Manne, B.; Bontha, S.; Ramesh, M.R.; Krishna, M.; Balla, V.K.
    Magnesium based bulk metallic glasses have attracted significant attention of researchers due to better mechanical and corrosion properties when compared to their crystalline counterparts especially for biomedical applications. Scaling up the part size and production volumes of such materials through liquid metallurgy route is challenging. In this work amorphous Ca5Mg60+xZn35?x (X = 0, 3 and 7) alloys have been successfully synthesized through solid state amorphization using a high energy planetary ball mill. X-ray diffraction was used to identify the crystalline phases of the powder during reaction. Evolution of amorphous phase was analysed using a parameter involving the ratio of integral area of peaks to the integral area of background (IPB) obtained from XRD patterns. Results showed reaction time increases with decreasing Zn content in Ca5Mg60+xZn35?x (X = 0, 3 and 7) alloy to obtain maximum amorphous structure with a small amount of residual crystalline phase. Prolonged milling of these powders, to eliminate residual crystalline phases, resulted in the nucleation of Mg102.08Zn39.6 phase. The composition dependent characteristic temperatures and thermal stabilities were studied using differential scanning calorimetry. © 2016 The Society of Powder Technology Japan
  • Item
    Effect of heat treatment on microstructure, corrosion, and shape memory characteristics of laser deposited NiTi alloy
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2018) Marattukalam, J.J.; Balla, V.K.; Das, M.; Bontha, S.; Kalpathy, S.K.
    The aim of this work is to study the effect of heat treatment on the microstructure, phase transformations, shape memory characteristics and corrosion behaviour of laser deposited equiatomic NiTi alloy. Dense samples of NiTi alloy were fabricated using Laser Engineered Net Shaping (LENS™) with two different laser energy densities by varying the scan speed and laser power. These samples were annealed for 30 min at 500 °C and 1000 °C in flowing argon, followed by furnace-cooling to room temperature. The resulting microstructures and properties were compared with the corresponding as-deposited samples. Microstructural analysis after heat treatment showed needle-shape martensite in the samples processed at lower laser energy density of 20 J/mm2, and lenticular or plate-like martensite in the samples processed at 80 J/mm2. The XRD results revealed relatively high concentration of martensite (B19?) in heat-treated NiTi alloy compared to as-processed samples. Furthermore, the heat treatment decreased the forward and reverse transformation temperatures of NiTi alloy from 80 – 95 °C to 20–40 °C, presumably due to annihilation of thermally induced defects. Interestingly, the samples annealed at 500 °C showed a measurable increase of 1–2% in the shape memory recovery, from the net recovery of 8% exhibited by the as-processed NiTi alloy. The corrosion resistance of laser-processed NiTi alloy decreased upon annealing. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.
  • Item
    Surface design of Mg-Zn alloy temporary orthopaedic implants: Tailoring wettability and biodegradability using laser surface melting
    (Elsevier B.V., 2018) Manne, B.; Thiruvayapati, H.; Bontha, S.; Motagondanahalli Rangarasaiah, R.; Das, M.; Balla, V.K.
    Magnesium-based alloys have attracted significant attention for biomedical applications due to its biodegradability as well as density and elastic modulus which are close to those of human bone. However, the uncontrolled biodegradation and hydrogen evolution are of major concern. In this work, laser surface melting (LSM) has been carried out to tailor initial corrosion rates of Mg-2.2Zn alloy implants. Melt pool dimensions, microstructure and surface topography of the LSM samples were analysed. The wettability and in vitro degradation characteristics of untreated and treated alloy were compared. LSM resulted in much finer cellular microstructural features than as-cast alloy and the melted region depths between 65 and 115 ?m. Higher treatment depths helped to extend the corrosion protection time by suppressing the corrosion front movement. Polished LSM samples resulted in overall corrosion rates of 0.5–0.62 mm/year which was about 40%–50% reduction compared to the as-cast alloy. Accelerated biomineralisation of the surface via enhancements in the surface energy due to microstructural refinement as well as microstructural homogeneity and Zn enrichment in ?-Mg, favoured improvement of the overall corrosion performance of LSM-treated alloy. © 2018 Elsevier B.V.
  • Item
    Effect of zinc and rare-earth element addition on mechanical, corrosion, and biological properties of magnesium
    (Cambridge University Press, 2018) Kottuparambil, R.R.; Bontha, S.; Ramesh, M.R.; Arya, S.; Jana, A.; Das, M.; Balla, V.K.; Amrithalingam, S.; Prabhu, T.R.
    The present work aims to understand the effect of zinc and rare-earth element addition (i.e., 2 wt% Gd, 2 wt% Dy, and 2 wt% of Gd and Nd individually) on the microstructure evolution, mechanical properties, in vitro corrosion behavior, and cytotoxicity of Mg for biomedical application. The microstructure results indicate that the Mg-Zn-Gd alloy consists of the lamellar long period stacking ordered phase. The electrochemical and immersion corrosion behavior were studied in Hanks balanced salt solution. Enhanced corrosion resistance with reduced hydrogen evolution volume and magnesium (Mg2+) ion release were estimated for the Mg-Zn-Gd alloy as compared to the other two alloy systems. At the early stage of corrosion, formation of the oxide film inhibited the corrosion propagation. However, at the later stages, the breaking of the oxide film leads to shallow pitting mode of corrosion. The ultimate tensile strength of Mg-Zn-Gd-Nd is better than the other two alloys due to the uniform distribution of the Mg12Nd precipitate phase. The moderate strength in the Mg-Zn-Gd alloy is due to the low volume fraction of the secondary phase. The MTT (methylthiazoldiphenyl-tetrazolium bromide) assay study was carried out to understand the cell cytotoxicity on the alloy surfaces. Studies revealed that all three alloys had significant cellular adherence and no adverse effect on cells. © 2018 Materials Research Society.
  • Item
    Laser surface modification of Mg-Zn-Gd alloy: Microstructural, wettability and in vitro degradation aspects
    (Institute of Physics Publishing helen.craven@iop.org, 2018) Rakesh, K.R.; Bontha, S.; Ramesh, M.R.; Arya, S.; Das, M.; Balla, V.K.; Srinivasan, A.
    Mg-Zn-Gd have great potential for biomedical applications owing to excellent bioactivity and non-toxicity properties. In the present study, laser surface melting (LSM) was carried out on newly developed Mg-1Zn -2Gd (wt%) alloy. Effects of laser energy on microstructural evolution, corrosion properties, surface energy, and hardness have been investigated. The surface modified sample processed at different energy densities showed fine grain structure in the melt zone compared to the untreated substrate. Grain refinement in the laser melted region improved the hardness by 60%. The surface roughness was found to be increased with increasing laser energy density. At higher energy density, removal of materials from the surface is enhanced, resulting in deeper grooves and higher surface roughness. The wettability studies indicated that the variations in surface geometry, grain size and surface roughness of LSM samples strongly influence the surface energy and hydrophilicity. Improved wetting of LSM sample was achieved owing to grain refinement and low surface roughness. The corrosion resistance determined by immersion and electrochemical methods of laser melted sample in Hank's balanced salt solution improved considerably due to grain refinement, meltpool depth and uniform distribution of secondary phases. © 2018 IOP Publishing Ltd.
  • Item
    Laser surface melting of ?-TiAl alloy: An experimental and numerical modeling study
    (Institute of Physics Publishing helen.craven@iop.org, 2019) Mallikarjuna, M.; Bontha, S.; Krishna, P.; Balla, V.K.
    The objective of present work is to study the evolution of thermal stresses during laser surface melting (LSM) of ?-TiAl alloy using experimental and numerical modeling approaches. LSM of ?-TiAl alloy samples were carried out at different processing conditions in a controlled atmosphere. Material characterization of the melted region was investigated using scanning electron microscope. It was found that fully lamellar microstructure was transformed into predominantly ?-TiAl with little amount of ?2-Ti3Al. A maximum improvement in hardness of over 72% was noticed in the melted region compared to that of the substrate. Three-dimensional thermomechanical finite element analysis of LSM of ?-TiAl alloy was carried out. Melt pool dimensions, temperature history, and residual stresses were predicted from the finite element models. Measured and predicted values of melt pool depth were in good agreement with a maximum error of 13.6% at P=400Wand V=10mms-1. Predicted residual stress in the melted region exceeded the yield strength of ?-TiAl alloy and resulted in cracking of the melted region at all process conditions. ©2019 IOP Publishing Ltd.
  • Item
    Microstructure, mechanical and wear properties of the A357 composites reinforced with dual sized SiC particles
    (Elsevier Ltd, 2019) Avinash, A.; Bontha, S.; Krishna, M.; Koppad, P.G.; Ramprabhu, T.
    Current work reports on the development of A357 alloy composite which is reinforced with dual size SiC particles by stir casting route. Influence of different weight fractions (3% coarse+ 3% fine, 4% coarse + 2% fine, and 2% coarse + 4% fine) of dual size SiC particles on mechanical properties and wear resistance of A357 composites is the focus of this work. Hardness and tensile properties were studied for dual size composites and then were compared with A357 alloy. Microstructural study, fractured surface and worn surface investigation were carried out using optical and scanning electron microscopes respectively. Microstructural analysis showed fairly uniform dispersion of dual size SiC particles in A357 matrix with good interfacial bonding. Compared to A357 alloy, the composites showed improvement in hardness, yield, and tensile strength. In particular, composite with 4 wt. % of fine and 2 wt. % of large SiC particles displayed the highest tensile strength while composite with 4 wt. % of large and 2 wt. % of fine SiC particles exhibited high hardness and wear resistance among A357 alloy and dual particle size composites. The strengthening mechanisms that contributed to improvement in strength values were effective load transfer and dislocation strengthening due to thermal mismatch. © 2019 Elsevier B.V.