Crackfree tungsten coating on ODS plate via a novel laser-based additive technique
Crackfree tungsten coating on ODS plate via a novel laser-based additive technique
Tuesday, March 12, 2024: 10:00 AM
E 216 A (Charlotte Convention Center)
A new laser-based additive manufacturing technique, offset laser cladding was introduced to achieve dense tungsten coating on an ODS substrate as a plasma facing material (PFM). Different from ordinary direct energy deposition (DED), which leads to incomplete melting of tungsten and excessive melting of ODS substrate, the offset laser cladding technique can achieve complete melting of tungsten while substrate melting was suppressed. Simulation methods were used to calculate laser parameters for experiments: laser power, scanning speed, powder size, offset distance and powder nozzle setup. Tungsten coating using the offset laser cladding in an open chamber condition showed that dense coating was achieved with a pore size of 1-2 µm. The result is comparable to that of vacuum plasma spray (VPS) tungsten coating which requires a high-level vacuum chamber. A thin interface layer (2-5 µm) was formed between the tungsten coating and ODS substrate that can alleviate thermal damage due to a large thermal expansion coefficient difference. While a small amount of surface melting was involved, the microhardness test revealed that the ODS substrate was insignificantly affected by laser heating during the offset laser cladding.