About this Abstract |
Meeting |
Materials Science & Technology 2020
|
Symposium
|
Additive Manufacturing of Ceramic-based Materials: Process Development, Materials, Process Optimization and Applications
|
Presentation Title |
Laser-based Additive Manufacturing of Bi-metallic & Tri-metallic Oxide Layers |
Author(s) |
Yi Lu, Michael Hurst, Subramaniam Velumani, Mathew Kuttolamadom, Homero Castaneda, Olivia Esmacher |
On-Site Speaker (Planned) |
Olivia Esmacher |
Abstract Scope |
The motivation of this work is to gain the ability to fabricate material layers that impart corrosion-resistance, self-cleaning and antibacterial properties, leading to an integration of multifunctional characteristics for various applications. Three naturally non-combinable powered metallic oxides namely zinc oxide, zirconium dioxide and titanium oxide were mixed and exposed to a high-energy laser to form solidified layers. The properties of the layers “coated” onto substrates were evaluated by microscopy (SEM), spectroscopy (EDS), diffraction (XRD), hardness, and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). The XRD pattern indicates the formation of a tri-metallic oxide and some other bimetallic compositions which are known to exhibit certain of the above-mentioned beneficial properties. Zinc dominated in atomic fraction when compared to titanium and zirconium. Higher energy densities imparted via the laser resulted in the steel substrate mixing with the powder layers, leading to more of a surface alloying action as compared to surface coating. |