Thermoelectric assessment of laser peening induced effects on a metallic biomedical Ti6Al4V


Autoria(s): Carreón, H.; Barriuso, S.; Porro González, Juan Antonio; González-Carrasco, J. L.; Ocaña Moreno, Jose Luis
Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Laser peening has recently emerged as a useful technique to overcome detrimental effects associated to another well-known surface modification processes such as shot peening or grit blasting used in the biomedical field. It is worth to notice that besides the primary residual stress effect, thermally induced effects might also cause subtle surface and subsurface microstructural changes that might influence corrosion resistance. Moreover, since maximum loads use to occur at the surface, they could also play a critical role in the fatigue strength. In this work, plates of Ti-6Al-4V alloy of 7 mm in thickness were modified by laser peening without using a sacrificial outer layer. Irradiation by a Q-switched Nd-YAG laser (9.4 ns pulse length) working in fundamental harmonic at 2.8 J/pulse and with water as confining medium was used. Laser pulses with a 1.5 mm diameter at an equivalent overlapping density (EOD) of 5000 cm-2 were applied. Attempts to analyze the global induced effects after laser peening were addressed by using the contacting and non-contacting thermoelectric power (TEP) techniques. It was demonstrated that the thermoelectric method is entirely insensitive to surface topography while it is uniquely sensitive to subtle variations in thermoelectric properties, which are associated with the different material effects induced by different surface modification treatments. These results indicate that the stress-dependence of the thermoelectric power in metals produces sufficient contrast to detect and quantitatively characterize regions under compressive residual stress based on their thermoelectric power contrast with respect to the surrounding intact material. However, further research is needed to better separate residual stress effects from secondary material effects, especially in the case of low-conductivity engineering materials like titanium alloys.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://oa.upm.es/37009/

Idioma(s)

spa

Publicador

E.T.S.I. Industriales (UPM)

Relação

http://oa.upm.es/37009/1/INVE_MEM_2014_197326.pdf

http://spie.org/Publications/Proceedings/Volume/8972

MAT2009-14695-C04

MAT 2012-37736-C05-01

MAT 2012-37782

Direitos

(c) Editor/Autor

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Frontiers in Ultrafast Optics: Biomedical, Scientific, and Industrial Applications XIV | Frontiers in Ultrafast Optics: Biomedical, Scientific, and Industrial Applications XIV | . | San Francisco

Palavras-Chave #Física
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject

Ponencia en Congreso o Jornada

PeerReviewed