%0 journal article %@ 2214-8604 %A Farias, F.W.C.,Duarte, V.R.,Felice, I.O.,Filho, J.D.C.P.,Schell, N.,Maawad, E.,Avila, J.A.,Li, J.Y.,Zhang, Y.,Santos, T.G.,Oliveira, J.P. %D 2023 %J Additive Manufacturing %N %P 103476 %R doi:10.1016/j.addma.2023.103476 %T In situ interlayer hot forging arc-based directed energy deposition of Inconel® 625: process development and microstructure effects %U https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addma.2023.103476 %X The typical as-built coarse and cube-oriented microstructure of Inconel® 625 parts fabricated via arc-based directed energy deposition (DED) induces anisotropic mechanical behavior, reducing the potential applications of arc-based DEDed Inconel® 625 in critical components. In this sense, the present work aimed to reduce the grain size and texture by applying an in situ interlayer hot forging (HF) combined with post-deposition heat treatments (PDHT). The produced samples were characterized through optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy coupled with electron backscatter diffraction, synchrotron X-ray diffraction, and Vickers microhardness. Also, a dedicated deformation tool was designed and optimized via a finite element method model considering the processing conditions and thermal cycle experienced by the material. It is shown that the in situ interlayer deformation induced a thermo-mechanical-affected zone (dynamic recrystallized + remaining deformation, with a height of ≈ 1.2 mm) at the bead top surface, which resulted in thinner aligned grains and lower texture index in relation to as-built DED counterpart. In addition, the effects of solution (1100 °C/ 1 h) and stabilization (980 °C/ 1 h) PDHTs on the Inconel® 625 HF-DEDed parts were also analyzed, which promoted fine and equiaxed static recrystallized grains without cube orientation, comparable to wrought material. Therefore, the HF-DED process significantly refined the typical coarse and highly oriented microstructure of Ni-based superalloys obtained by arc-based DED.