Submitted:
11 September 2025
Posted:
12 September 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
1.1. Background
1.2. Interfacial Bonding and Residual Stress of Single Splats
1.3. Structure of This Review
2. Characterization of the Bonding Strength in Single Splats
2.1. Tensile Test
2.2. Scraping Test
2.3. Indentation Test
2.4. Focused Ion Beam-Milled Microcantilever Beam Bending Test
2.5. Scratch Test
2.6. Short Summary
3. Characterization of the Residual Stress in Single Splats
3.1. X-Ray Diffraction
3.2. Raman Spectroscopy
3.3. Focused Ion Beam–Digital Image Correlation
3.4. High-Resolution Electron Backscatter Diffraction via Cross-Correlation-Based Pattern Shift Analysis
3.5. Strain Evolution Measured Using Strain Gauges
3.6. Short Summary
4. Analytical Models and Numerical Simulations of the Residual Stress in Single Splats
4.1. Analytical Models
4.2. Numerical Simulations
4.3. Short Summary
5. The Interplay of Bonding Strength and Residual Stress in Single Splats: Mechanisms and Control Strategies
5.1. Correlation Between Residual Stress and Interfacial Bonding Strength
5.2. Factors Influencing Residual Stress of Single Splats
5.3. Strategies for Improving Interfacial Bonding
5.3.1. Optimizing the Substrate Preheating Temperature
5.3.2. Improving Particle Impact Velocity
5.4. Role of Deposition Dynamics in Determining Mechanical Properties
5.5. Short Summary
6. Summary and Perspective
6.1. Summary
- Characterization of bonding strength: Various techniques have been employed to measure the bonding strength at the splat/substrate interface. The scratch test remains the most widely applied owing to its relative simplicity and sensitivity to interfacial adhesion. However, more refined approaches, such as tensile loading, indentation, scraping, and FIB-milled microcantilever bending, have been used to capture interfacial fracture behavior under different loading modes. These studies collectively reveal that bonding strength is significantly influenced by particle impact velocity, substrate preheating, and interfacial solidification dynamics. Enhanced bonding typically results from higher kinetic energy, increased interfacial temperature, and improved chemical or metallurgical bonding during rapid solidification.
- Measurement and modeling of residual stress: Residual stress in single splats arises from thermal contraction during solidification and quenching, as well as mismatched thermal expansion between the splat and substrate during subsequent cooling. Experimental methods, such as XRD, micro-indentation, and curvature measurements, have enabled residual stress quantification, but in-situ techniques remain limited. FE simulations combined with thermal and mechanical modeling provide insight into transient stress evolution and distribution. These models have evolved to incorporate elastic, plastic, and time-dependent deformation mechanisms and increasingly use fluid dynamics outputs as initial conditions for mechanical simulations.
- Coupling of bonding strength and residual stress: Bonding strength and residual stress are interrelated through their dependence on splat formation dynamics. Residual tensile stress can weaken the interface by partially offsetting externally applied stress during testing, thereby reducing apparent adhesion strength. Conversely, stress relaxation mechanisms, such as cracking, interfacial debonding, plastic yielding, and edge curling, may alter the stress state. As a result, the mechanical stability of a splat is not only a function of initial bonding but also of the stress evolution and dissipation during cooling.
- Influence of deposition conditions: The mechanical outcomes of splats are governed by the interplay between particle velocity, temperature, substrate conditions, and material properties. Substrate preheating is particularly influential because it alters the cooling rate, quenching stress magnitude, and solidification front behavior. Furthermore, material-dependent properties, such as the thermal conductivity and CTE, control stress accumulation and relaxation behaviors across different splat–substrate systems.
6.2. Perspective
- The mechanisms governing splat–substrate bonding and stress development are strongly influenced by transient phenomena during impact and solidification. However, real-time observation of interfacial phase changes, temperature gradients, and bonding formation remains largely inaccessible. The development of in-situ detection techniques, such as high-speed imaging, high-speed thermal mapping, or electron microscopy with time-resolved capabilities, may provide unprecedented insight into interfacial processes at the sub-microsecond scale.
- Most current techniques for measuring bonding strength are either qualitative or subject to high variability because of the sample preparation and loading conditions. There is a critical need to establish standardized, reproducible methods for quantifying interfacial tensile and shear strength. This would not only improve comparability across studies but also enable more precise evaluation of the interfacial properties.
- Capturing the spatial and temporal evolution of residual stress during splat cooling remains a key issue. In-situ methods, such as DIC and laser-based strain mapping, combined with advanced modeling that accounts for inelastic deformation and stress relaxation, are essential for the accurate prediction of residual stress states. Furthermore, modeling frameworks should include imperfect bonding, interfacial sliding, and phase-dependent mechanical properties.
- A major gap in current computational approaches is the separation between fluid dynamics simulations (governing droplet spreading and solidification) and mechanical modeling (describing stress evolution). A unified multi-physics model that integrates hydrodynamics, heat transfer, phase transformation, and stress generation within a single simulation framework is highly desirable. Such a model is expected to enable the predictive design of deposition processes based on targeted mechanical outcomes at the splat scale.
Acknowledgments
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| Splat material | Substrate material | Method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wax | Teflon, polyethylene | Tensile | [52] |
| ZnO nanorods on carbon fibers | Thermoplastic matrix | Scraping | [54] |
| Epoxy resin | Single carbon fiber | Scraping | [53] |
| Thermoplastic matrix | Single carbon fiber | Scraping | [54] |
| ZrO2-8 wt.%Y2O3 | CoNiCrAlY bond coat + nickel-base superalloy |
Scraping | [55] |
| Wax | 430 stainless steel | Scraping | [56] |
| ZrO2-8 wt.%Y2O3 | Stainless steel | Scraping | [57] |
| Al2O3 | Stainless steel 304 | Indentation | [59] |
| CoNiCrAlY | Ni-based superalloy | FIB-milled microcantilever beam bending |
[61] |
| Al2O3 | Ni-based superalloy | Scratch | [63] |
| Al2O3 with multiwall carbon nanotubes | Steel | Scratch | [64] |
| Al2O3, TiO2 | C20 steel | Scratch | [65] |
| Carbon nanofiller-reinforced Al2O3 | AISI 1020 steel | Scratch | [66] |
| Fe-based amorphous alloy | AISI 1045 steel | Scratch | [67] |
| Splat material | Substrate material | Method | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mo | Steel, Al | XRD | [75] |
| Mo | Stainless steel | XRD | [76] |
| Mo | Stainless steel | XRD | [77] |
| Mo | Stainless steel 304 | XRD | [78] |
| YSZ | NiCrAlY bond coat + 316 stainless steel substrate |
Raman spectroscopy | [79] |
| Ni−5wt.%Al | Stainless steel | FIB–DIC material removal | [83] |
| Ni−5wt.%Al, Al2O3, (Al2O3−13wt.%TiO2)−8wt.%ZrO2−8wt.%CeO2 |
Ni−5wt.%Al bond coat + stainless steel substrate | HR-EBSD | [61] |
| Wax | Stainless steel 430 | Reverse calculation from strain | [89] |
| Wax | Stainless steel 430 | Reverse calculation from strain | [90] |
| Wax | Stainless steel 430 | Reverse calculation from strain | [91] |
| Splat material | Substrate material | Deformation | Method | Code | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | - | Elastic | Elastic model | - | [34] |
| Mo | Stainless steel 304 | Elastic | Elastic model with correction coefficients | - | [78] |
| YSZ | Steel alloy | Elastic–plastic | SPH-FEM | ABAQUS/Standard + ABAQUS/Explicit | [96] |
| Mo | Stainless steel 304 | Elastic | VOF + FEM | FLOW-3D + ABAQUS | [78] |
| Carbon steel | Carbon steel | Elastic, creep | FEM | ABAQUS | [93] |
| Al alloy, Bi | Steel | Elastic | FEM | ANSYS | [94] |
| YSZ | Stainless Steel | Elastic–plastic | FEM | ABAQUS/Explicit | [95] |
| Wax | Stainless steel 430 | Elastic | FEM | ABAQUS/Standard | [90] |
| Wax | Stainless steel 430 | Elastic, creep | FEM | ABAQUS/Standard | [91] |
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