Development and characterization of Al-Si based functionally graded material through Directional Solidification
Date
2020
Authors
N, Ramesh Babu.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Many structural components encounter service conditions and hence required material
performance vary with location within the component. It is well known that abrupt
transitions in materials composition and properties within a component often result in
sharp local concentrations of stress, whether the stress is internal or applied externally. It
is also known that these stress concentrations are greatly reduced if the transition from
one material to the other is made gradual.
By definition, functionally graded materials (FGM’s) are used to produce components
featuring engineered gradual transitions in microstructure and/or composition, the presence of which is motivated by functional performance requirements that vary with
location within a part. With functionally graded materials, these requirements are met
in a manner that optimizes the overall performance of the component. The research
on FGM’s is encouraged by the need for properties that are unavailable in any single
material and the need for graded properties to offset adverse effects of discontinuities
for layered materials. Directional solidification is the common method for fabricating
FGM’s which is mainly a composite material which has high differences of density and
low solubility on different phases or different materials of the same alloy. The main
thrust in the present work is to fabricate FGM’s for solid valve lifter applications.
The first phase of study was to fabricate Al-Si based and Al-Si reinforced with 2wt%
graphite FGM’s, to accomplish this a novel directional solidification technique combined
with lateral vibrations was developed.
In the second phase of study, optimization of process parameters i.e. chill material,
chill volume and pouring temperature were carried out using taguchi technique through
the experiments performed according to the L27 orthogonal array. The optimization
was carried out by investigating the influence of process parameters(chill material, chill
volume and pouring temperature) on hardness values across the top and bottom portion of
the cast specimen. The castings obtained by both with vibrations and without vibrationswere tested. From the obtained results it was revealed that optimized samples obtained
with lateral vibrations exhibited better variation in properties compared to the ones
obtained without vibrations
In the third phase of study, evaluation of mechanical and tribological characteristics
was carried out on the optimized sample of Al-Si based FGM and Al-Si reinforced with
2wt% graphite FGMs to understand the significance of lateral vibrations. The FGM’s
have been analyzed for microstructure by the scanning electron microscope (SEM)
morphologies which revealed that concentration of Si was more at the top portion. The
spatial transition of Si can be attributed to the presence of the chill at the bottom and
to the influence of lateral vibrations which has led to variation of properties within the
structure, these observations were also supported by the hardness values. Ultimate tensile
strength (UTS) results also showed shift in the properties from bottom to top portion of
the cast. Wear analysis carried out at the top and the bottom portion of the FGM showed
that there is a decrease in wear loss, coefficient of friction and specific wear rate at the
top portion compared to the bottom portion. Worn-out surface analysis revealed that
graphite addition had imparted the self-lubricating property at the top portion which
could serve as anti-friction and anti-wear applications in the automotive sector.
Description
Keywords
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Functionally graded material, Directional solidification, Chill, Lateral vibrations, Taguchi technique, Hardness, Strength, Wear resistanc