TY - JOUR
AU - Kultz Unti, Luiz Fernando
AU - Aota, L. S.
AU - Lopes, E. S. N.
AU - Ribamar, G. G.
AU - Schell, N.
AU - Oliveira, J. P.
AU - Gault, B.
AU - Avila, J. A.
AU - Jardini, A. L.
AU - Zilnyk, K. D.
TI - Microstructural evolution in high-temperature direct aging on PBF-LB 15-5PH stainless steel
JO - Acta materialia
VL - 303
SN - 1359-6454
CY - Amsterdam [u.a.]
PB - Elsevier Science
M1 - PUBDB-2025-05144
SP - 121747
PY - 2026
N1 - Waiting for fulltext
AB - High solidification rates and in situ heat treatments are commonly found in additive manufacturing (AM) ofsteels, resulting in a complex and far-from-equilibrium microstructure. Therefore, standard post-processing heattreatments commonly applied to wrought steels can favor the occurrence of different phenomena and can changethe phase transformation sequence, due to the unique microstructure obtained by powder bed fusion – laserbeam (PBF-LB). This work reports the microstructural evolution of 15-5 precipitation hardening (PH) stainlesssteel manufactured by PBF-LB during direct aging heat treatments at 621 ◦C (AMS H1150 standard condition), aroute used to increase fracture toughness due to the martensite reversion and precipitates coarsening. Thereversion of martensite into a Ni-rich austenite, predicted by kinetic calculations, was confirmed by high-energyX-ray diffraction (HE-XRD), being preferentially nucleated close to the copper-rich precipitates (CRPs), whichcan act as a preferential nucleation site. CRPs presented an oval shape, as confirmed by electronic microscopy(SEM and TEM) and atom probe tomography (APT). Fast Fourier transform (FFT) analysis of high-resolution TEM(HR-TEM) images suggests CRPs still present the metastable untwined 3R-type structure after 8 h, rather than themost stable FCC structure. The presence of retained austenite, inherent to PBF-LB-processed PH steels, affects theCRPs evolution in different phases, and the CRPs themselves act as nucleation sites for Nb(C,N) secondaryprecipitation. These findings emphasize the necessity of microstructure-oriented heat treatment routes to unlockthe full potential of additively manufactured PH stainless steels.
LB - PUB:(DE-HGF)16
DO - DOI:10.1016/j.actamat.2025.121747
UR - https://bib-pubdb1.desy.de/record/641733
ER -