Article (Scientific journals)
Surface Defect Mitigation of Additively Manufactured Parts Using Surfactant-Mediated Electroless Nickel Coatings.
Jolly, Anju; VITRY, Véronique; Azar, Golnaz Taghavi Pourian et al.
2024In Materials (Basel, Switzerland), 17 (2), p. 406
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Keywords :
additive manufacturing; electroless deposition; filling; levelling; nickel; surfactants; Boron deposition; Defect mitigations; Electroless nickel; Electroless nickel coatings; Gas entrapments; Levelings; Manufactured defects; Manufacturing stages; Mechanical performance; Production phase; Materials Science (all); Condensed Matter Physics; General Materials Science
Abstract :
[en] The emergence of defects during the early production phases of ferrous-alloy additively manufactured (AM) parts poses a serious threat to their versatility and adversely impacts their overall mechanical performance in industries ranging from aerospace engineering to medicine. Lack of fusion and gas entrapment during the manufacturing stages leads to increased surface roughness and porosities in the finished part. In this study, the efficacy of employing electroless nickel-boron (Ni-B) deposition to fill and level simulated AM defects was evaluated. The approach to levelling was inspired by the electrochemical deposition techniques used to fill vias in the electronics industry that (to some extent) resemble the size and shape of AM-type defects. This work investigated the use of surfactants to attenuate surface roughness in electroless nickel coatings, thereby achieving the preferential inhibition of the coating thickness on the surface and promoting the filling of the simulated defects. A cationic surfactant molecule, CTAB (cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide), and a nonpolar surfactant, PEG (polyethylene glycol), at different concentrations were tested using a Ni-B electrolyte for the levelling study. It was found that the use of electroless Ni-B to fill simulated defects on ferrous alloys was strongly influenced by the concentration and nature of the surfactant. The highest levelling percentages were obtained for the heavy-molecular-weight PEG-mediated coatings at 1.2 g/L. The results suggest that electroless Ni-B deposition could be a novel and facile approach to filling defects in ferrous-based AM parts.
Disciplines :
Materials science & engineering
Author, co-author :
Jolly, Anju  ;  Université de Mons - UMONS > Faculté Polytechnique > Service de Métallurgie ; The Functional Materials and Chemistry Group, Centre for Manufacturing and Materials, The Institute for Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering, Coventry University, Beresford Ave., Coventry CV6 5LZ, UK
VITRY, Véronique  ;  Université de Mons - UMONS > Faculté Polytechnique > Service de Métallurgie
Azar, Golnaz Taghavi Pourian ;  The Functional Materials and Chemistry Group, Centre for Manufacturing and Materials, The Institute for Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering, Coventry University, Beresford Ave., Coventry CV6 5LZ, UK
Guaraldo, Thais Tasso ;  The Functional Materials and Chemistry Group, Centre for Manufacturing and Materials, The Institute for Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering, Coventry University, Beresford Ave., Coventry CV6 5LZ, UK
Cobley, Andrew J;  The Functional Materials and Chemistry Group, Centre for Manufacturing and Materials, The Institute for Advanced Manufacturing and Engineering, Coventry University, Beresford Ave., Coventry CV6 5LZ, UK
Language :
English
Title :
Surface Defect Mitigation of Additively Manufactured Parts Using Surfactant-Mediated Electroless Nickel Coatings.
Publication date :
13 January 2024
Journal title :
Materials (Basel, Switzerland)
ISSN :
1996-1944
eISSN :
1996-1944
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), Switzerland
Volume :
17
Issue :
2
Pages :
406
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Research unit :
F601 - Métallurgie
Research institute :
R400 - Institut de Recherche en Science et Ingénierie des Matériaux
Funders :
Cotutelle Agreement between Coventry University
The University of Mons
Funding text :
The authors would like to gratefully acknowledge the Cotutelle Agreement between Coventry University and the University of Mons for the funding. The authors would also like to thank Yoann Paint from Materia Nova for his help with the analysis of the samples using SEM.
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since 17 April 2024

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