This invention relates generally to the field of solid freeform fabrication and repair of metal components, and particularly to additive layer fabrication and repair of high-temperature superalloy components.
Superalloy components such as gas turbine blades can develop defects including cracks and surface wear. Often such wear is theoretically repairable by removal of some volume of defective material and filling the removed volume with replacement metal via cladding techniques. However, airfoils and other complex shapes are difficult to clad because the repair requires controlling the delivery of process energy and filler material onto a 3D curved surface. Advanced laser scanning optics, such as galvanometer driven mirrors and other optical tools, can rapidly scan a laser beam in three dimensions. However, delivering the cladding filler material in three dimensions is difficult. Blowing of powder is inefficient. Even flat horizontal surfaces allow particulate scattering losses on the order of 40%. Surfaces inclined to the powder delivery direction cause even higher powder scattering losses of up to nearly 100%. Filler material may be delivered by feeding a solid wire to such inclined surfaces. However, the wire tip position must be precisely coordinated with the laser beam spot. A laser beam can move much more rapidly and precisely than a wire tip, so the wire slows processing and reduces precision.
Superalloy materials are among the most difficult materials to fabricate and repair due to their susceptibility to melt solidification cracking and strain age cracking. The term “superalloy” is used herein as it is commonly used in the art -- a highly corrosion and oxidation resistant alloy with excellent mechanical strength and resistance to creep at high temperatures. (see Wikipedia definition available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superalloy) Superalloys typically include high nickel or cobalt content. Examples of superalloys include alloys sold under the trademarks and brand names Hastelloy, Inconel alloys (e.g. IN 738, IN 792, IN 939), Rene alloys (e.g. Rene N5, Rene 80, Rene 142), Haynes alloys, Mar M, CM 247, CM 247 LC, C263, 718, X-750, ECY 768, 282, X45, PWA 1483 and CMSX (e.g. CMSX-4) single crystal alloys. The term “metal” as used herein is meant to include pure metals as well as alloys of metal.
Selective laser melting (SLM) is the fusing of metallic particles in a powder bed by the application of localized laser heat to melt the powder and form a melt pool which solidifies as a consolidated layer of material that forms a solid cross section. When interaction of laser radiation with metal powder occurs, the energy deposition is highly dependent upon the energy coupling mechanism. Multiple reflections between unbound powder particles leads to higher optical penetration depths compared to solid material. However, versions of SLM suffer some or all of the following disadvantages:
a) Limited to processing on a flat horizontal surface in a chamber in order to retain the powder by gravity during laser processing.
b) Limited to weldable materials such as shown in
c) A slow process, because each layer must be thin, such as 20 microns. Using thicker layers requires a higher energy density which can cause cracking.
d) Requires an inert shielding gas to avoid oxidation.
e) Requires preheating of the substrate and/or the powder to avoid cracking.
f) Limited usable beam energy density. An increase in energy density causes a larger degree of melting causing the material to form spherical balls rather than build a consistent layer.
g) Requires post-processing operations such as shot peening and hot isostatic pressing (HIP) to remove voids and contaminants.
h) Process is highly sensitive to powder production method.
Laser cladding is a solid freeform fabrication (SFF) process that deposits a metallic filler material onto the surface of a substrate to form a metal layer for repair or additive manufacture. A laser beam melts the surface of the substrate to form a melt pool into which the metallic filler material is continuously provided (e.g., pre-placed, fed ahead of, injected), thus forming a metal layer or cladding on the surface. One popular form of laser cladding uses powder that is pre-placed or fed ahead of the process location on the surface of the substrate. Various versions of laser cladding suffer some or all of the following disadvantages:
a) Slow process because each layer must be thin, such as 0.5 mm.
b) Even slower for materials that are hard to weld as shown in
c) Requires an inert shielding gas to avoid oxidation.
d) Requires high preheating or fast cooling of the substrate to avoid cracking.
e) In some cases there is sensitivity to the powder production method.
As new superalloys are developed, there is a challenge to develop commercially feasible joining processes for superalloy materials. These joining processes have direct impact on repair and SFF applications for superalloys. Both SLM and laser cladding depend on the laser coupling efficiency, which depends on many factors, including powder size, powder quality and laser energy density. Powder sizes used in typical powder based processes are shown in
The invention is explained in the following description in view of the drawings that show:
In one embodiment, fibers 32, 33 of the preform 22A may be heated in a mold or mixed in a liquid and dried in a mold, and the preform maintains its shape by mechanical interlocking in the random web of the fibers. Different additive materials may be contained in the same preform in different layers or in a gradient of materials. For example, a first layer may contain a structural superalloy, a second layer may contain a metallic bond coat, and a third layer may contain a ceramic thermal barrier material. Alternately, different additive materials may be deposited in a gradient when forming the preform. The preform may include a superalloy material and a flux material, and the metal is constrained in the preform in a distribution that creates a desired shape of a metal layer of a metal component in response to a melting of the metal with an energy beam.
a) The metal and flux be woven in respectively different directions as shown.
b) Metal and flux strands or yarns may alternate in each direction.
c) Each strand or yarn may contain a predetermined mixture of metal fibers and flux fibers.
d) The metal and flux strands or yarns may be woven in a pattern that creates a predetermined distribution and proportion of the metal and the flux in the preform.
Long fibers of one material can compensate for short fibers of another material to provide adequate fabric strength. This is useful for example when particles or short fibers of the metal or the flux are much less expensive than long fibers. For example where long metal fibers are expensive, flux fibers with a length/diameter ratio greater than 100 may be combined with metal particles and/or metal fibers with a length/diameter ratio of less than 30.
Any iron, nickel, or cobalt based superalloy used for high temperature applications such as gas turbine engines may be fabricated, joined, repaired, or coated with this method and apparatus, including superalloys outside the zone of weldability in
The slag formed by the melted flux shapes and supports the deposit, preserves heat and slows the cooling rate, reducing residual stresses that otherwise contribute to strain age (reheat) cracking during post weld heat treatments. The flux may compensate for elemental losses in the superalloy or add alloying elements. Metal and flux pre-placement via a preform can reduce the time involved in total part building because it allows greater thickness of the deposit.
Repair processes for superalloy materials in accordance with embodiments of the present invention may include removal of degraded surface material and preparing a preform that matches the prepared surface. The energy beam is then traversed across the pre-placed preform to melt the powder and an upper layer of the substrate into a melt pool having a floating slag layer. This heals surface defects, leaving a renewed surface upon removal of the slag by known mechanical and/or chemical processes. The apparatus and process herein has the following advantages:
a) Can build on existing 3-D surfaces. Not limited to horizontal flat surfaces.
b) High maximum build rate, such as over 3 or 4 mm per layer.
c) Usable for metals that are difficult to weld.
d) Robust process that is adaptable to new damage modes.
e) No pre-heating or fast cooling needed.
f) Improved shielding that extends over the hot deposited metal without the need for inert gas. No shielding of the melt pool by inert gas is needed.
g) Allows a wide range of usable superalloys.
h) Flux enhanced cleansing of the deposit of constituents that otherwise lead to solidification cracking.
i) Flux enhanced laser beam absorption and minimal reflection back to processing equipment.
While various embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes and substitutions may be made without departing from the invention herein. Accordingly, it is intended that the invention be limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/175,525 filed on 7 Feb. 2014, (attorney docket 2014P02381 US) which is incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14175525 | Feb 2014 | US |
Child | 14282410 | US |