The State of the Art for Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing Process of Titanium Alloys for Aerospace Applications

被引:0
|
作者
Dipayan Chakraborty
Tumula Tirumala
Srihari Chitral
B. N. Sahoo
D. V. Kiran
P. Ajay Kumar
机构
[1] Indian Institute of Technology,Department of Mechanical Engineering
[2] Sardar Vallabhbhai National Institute of Technology,Department of Mechanical Engineering
关键词
aircraft structure; challenges and advancement; mechanical and metallographic properties; titanium alloys; wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM);
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Aerospace industries invest a significant amount of resources to meet one common goal, that is, to make the aircraft fly. To keep down its ‘buy-to-fly’ ratio, researchers have been working hard to introduce additive manufacturing (AM) technique for producing aerospace components. AM technologies are also now being used in major parts of an aircraft like fuel nozzles, turbofan blades, compressor-turbine blades, suspension wishbone, air ducts, etc., due to its just in time production with less complexity, direct tooling, and higher customer satisfaction with significant cost reduction including interior design. Nowadays, aerospace industries face problems meeting the deadline for delivering the aircraft components and replacement parts while maintaining certification standards. The wire arc additive manufacturing (WAAM) technique, one of the AM processes, can fabricate large metallic components with some reduction in lead time. WAAM process can build near net shape parts with high material deposition rate and efficiency while keeping the equipment and feedstock cost and material wastage minimal. This review paper summarizes the latest advancement on wire arc additive manufacturing of titanium and its alloy based on the aerospace application. Titanium and its alloys are used at a large scale in aircraft airframe structures and engine parts due to its high strength-to-weight ratio, excellent corrosion-resistant, high creep and fatigue resistance at an elevated temperature. It has been studied that the mechanical and metallographic properties of titanium and its alloy can be enhanced by using the WAAM process, and it is suited for aerospace applications. The paper will review the challenges like porosity, delamination, residual stress, crack propagation, anisotropic behavior, oxidation, etc., associated with the WAAM process on titanium alloys and propose recommendations for reducing the defects during the WAAM process.
引用
收藏
页码:6149 / 6182
页数:33
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Dynamic Mechanical Properties of TC11 Titanium Alloys Fabricated by Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing
    Tian, Ze
    Wu, Haijun
    Tan, Chengwen
    Dong, Heng
    Li, Meng
    Huang, Fenglei
    MATERIALS, 2022, 15 (11)
  • [32] In Situ Ultrasonic Testing for Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing Applications
    Lopez, Ana Beatriz
    Sousa, Jose Pedro
    Pragana, Joao P. M.
    Braganca, Ivo M. F.
    Santos, Telmo G.
    Silva, Carlos M. A.
    MACHINES, 2022, 10 (11)
  • [33] In Situ Production of Titanium Aluminides during Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing with Hot-Wire Assisted GMAW Process
    Henckell, Philipp
    Ali, Yarop
    Metz, Andreas
    Bergmann, Jean Pierre
    Reimann, Jan
    METALS, 2019, 9 (05)
  • [34] Selection of optimal process parameters for wire arc additive manufacturing
    Liberini, Mariacira
    Astarita, Antonello
    Campatelli, Gianni
    Scippa, Antonio
    Montevecchi, Filippo
    Venturini, Giuseppe
    Durante, Massimo
    Boccarusso, Luca
    Minutolo, Fabrizio Memola Capece
    Squillace, A.
    10TH CIRP CONFERENCE ON INTELLIGENT COMPUTATION IN MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING - CIRP ICME '16, 2017, 62 : 464 - 468
  • [35] Thermal Behavior Determination for Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing Process
    Yildiz, Ahmet Suat
    Koc, Baris
    Yilmaz, Oguzhan
    10TH CIRP SPONSORED CONFERENCE ON DIGITAL ENTERPRISE TECHNOLOGIES (DET 2020) - DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES AS ENABLERS OF INDUSTRIAL COMPETITIVENESS AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 54 : 233 - 237
  • [36] Suppression of anisotropy by wire and arc additive manufacturing with finishing process
    Department of Science and Engineering, Saitama University, 255 Shimo-Okubo Sakura-ku, Saitama, Saitama-shi
    338-8570, Japan
    J. Adv. Mech. Des. Syst. Manuf., 1600, 6
  • [37] Automated process planning for conformal wire arc additive manufacturing
    Bhatt, Prahar M.
    Kulkarni, Ashish
    Kanyuck, Alec
    Malhan, Rishi K.
    Santos, Luis S.
    Thakar, Shantanu
    Bruck, Hugh A.
    Gupta, Satyandra K.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 119 (5-6): : 3545 - 3570
  • [38] Analytical process model for wire plus arc additive manufacturing
    Rios, Sergio
    Colegrove, Paul A.
    Martina, Filomeno
    Williams, Stewart W.
    ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING, 2018, 21 : 651 - 657
  • [39] A mechanical model in wire plus Arc additive manufacturing process
    Bonifaz, E. A.
    Palomeque, J. S.
    PROGRESS IN ADDITIVE MANUFACTURING, 2020, 5 (02) : 163 - 169
  • [40] Online monitoring of wire arc additive manufacturing process: a review
    Azizul Izham, Emalyn Damyra Idza
    Alkahari, Mohd Rizal
    Hussein, Nur Izan Syahriah
    Maidin, Shajahan
    Ramli, Faiz Redza
    Herawan, Safarudin Gazali
    ADVANCES IN MATERIALS AND PROCESSING TECHNOLOGIES, 2024, 10 (03) : 1412 - 1427