On the anisotropic creep behavior of a Ni-base superalloy CM247LC manufactured by powder bed fusion – laser beam
Journal article, 2026

Additive Manufacturing (AM), specifically Powder Bed Fusion – Laser Beam (PBF–LB), offers unique capabilities for manufacturing of components with Ni-base superalloys like CM247LC, yet often introduces microstructure-dependent mechanical anisotropy. This study investigates the profound influence of build direction on the high-temperature tensile creep performance and deformation mechanisms of a PBF–LB CM247LC superalloy with test conditions of 871 °C and 380 MPa, correlating macroscopic performance with detailed post-mortem electron backscattered diffraction and controlled electron channeling contrast imaging. Significant creep anisotropy was revealed with vertically built (VB) specimens exhibiting markedly higher creep rupture lives (100–200 h) and ductility (up to 6 %) compared to horizontally built (HB) counterparts (15 h, 0.8 %). Microstructural analysis of heat-treated specimen prior to creep confirmed the persistence of an inherent columnar grain structure, directly linking this anisotropy to the relative alignment of grains with the applied load. Post-creep microstructural analysis of ruptured vertically built specimens showed widespread plastic deformation identified through the presence of dislocations, deformation twins (microtwins) and stacking faults. In contrast, horizontal specimens show localized plastic deformation at grain boundaries, leading to premature, brittle intergranular fracture with minimal overall ductility. While the creep performance of vertically built PBF–LB CM247LC specimens approaches that of conventionally cast CM247LC, horizontally built specimens remain significantly inferior. These insights into anisotropic deformation mechanisms are crucial for optimizing design, processing, and reliable deployment of additively manufactured superalloys in high-temperature applications.

Creep

CM247LC

Laser beam

Powder bed fusion

Deformation

Anisotropy

Author

Ahmed Fardan Jabir Hussain

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Jinghao Xu

Linköping University

A. Shaafi Shaikh

EOS Finland Oy

Johannes Gårdstam

Quintus Technologies AB

Uta Klement

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

JJ Moverare

Linköping University

Håkan Brodin

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Siemens Energy

Eduard Hryha

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Materials Science & Engineering A: Structural Materials: Properties, Microstructure and Processing

0921-5093 (ISSN)

Vol. 953 149707

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Metallurgy and Metallic Materials

Manufacturing, Surface and Joining Technology

DOI

10.1016/j.msea.2025.149707

More information

Latest update

1/28/2026