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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Taylor, Zane, Reddy, Tharun, Fitzpatrick, Maureen, Kim, Kwan, Li, Wei, Leung, Chu Lun Alex, Lee, Peter D., Bertsch, Kaila M., Dresselhaus-Marais, Leora
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.13341
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author Taylor, Zane
Reddy, Tharun
Fitzpatrick, Maureen
Kim, Kwan
Li, Wei
Leung, Chu Lun Alex
Lee, Peter D.
Bertsch, Kaila M.
Dresselhaus-Marais, Leora
author_facet Taylor, Zane
Reddy, Tharun
Fitzpatrick, Maureen
Kim, Kwan
Li, Wei
Leung, Chu Lun Alex
Lee, Peter D.
Bertsch, Kaila M.
Dresselhaus-Marais, Leora
contents In the laser welding and additive manufacturing (AM) communities, the balling defect is primarily attributed to the action of fluid instabilities with a few authors suggesting other mechanisms. Without commenting on the validity of the fluid instability driven \textit{mechanism} of balling in AM, this work intends to present the most realistic analytical discussion of the balling defect driven purely by fluid instabilities. Synchrotron-based X-ray radiography of thin samples indicate that fluid instability growth rates and solidification can be comparable in magnitude and thus compete. Neglecting the action of fluid flows and heat transport, this work presents an analytical formalism which accounts for fluid instabilities and solidification competition, giving a continuous transition from balling to non-balling which is lacking in current literature. We adapt a Rivulet instability model from the fluid physics community to account for the stabilizing effects of the substrate which the Plateau-Rayleigh instability model does not account for, and estimate the instability growth rate. Our model predicts instability growth at higher wavelengths and shallower melt pool depths relative to width, as well as strong sensitivity to the solidification front curvature. Deviations between model predictions and our experimental results demonstrate the importance of fluid flows and heat transport in the balling process. Our experiments further demonstrate at least one mechanism by which the melt pool length and balling wavelength are not equivalent, as commonly claimed.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2502_13341
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Analytical model for balling defects in laser melting using rivulet theory and solidification
Taylor, Zane
Reddy, Tharun
Fitzpatrick, Maureen
Kim, Kwan
Li, Wei
Leung, Chu Lun Alex
Lee, Peter D.
Bertsch, Kaila M.
Dresselhaus-Marais, Leora
Fluid Dynamics
Materials Science
In the laser welding and additive manufacturing (AM) communities, the balling defect is primarily attributed to the action of fluid instabilities with a few authors suggesting other mechanisms. Without commenting on the validity of the fluid instability driven \textit{mechanism} of balling in AM, this work intends to present the most realistic analytical discussion of the balling defect driven purely by fluid instabilities. Synchrotron-based X-ray radiography of thin samples indicate that fluid instability growth rates and solidification can be comparable in magnitude and thus compete. Neglecting the action of fluid flows and heat transport, this work presents an analytical formalism which accounts for fluid instabilities and solidification competition, giving a continuous transition from balling to non-balling which is lacking in current literature. We adapt a Rivulet instability model from the fluid physics community to account for the stabilizing effects of the substrate which the Plateau-Rayleigh instability model does not account for, and estimate the instability growth rate. Our model predicts instability growth at higher wavelengths and shallower melt pool depths relative to width, as well as strong sensitivity to the solidification front curvature. Deviations between model predictions and our experimental results demonstrate the importance of fluid flows and heat transport in the balling process. Our experiments further demonstrate at least one mechanism by which the melt pool length and balling wavelength are not equivalent, as commonly claimed.
title Analytical model for balling defects in laser melting using rivulet theory and solidification
topic Fluid Dynamics
Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2502.13341