Archive/Computational Investigation of Friction Stir Processing of Ti-6Al-4V Alloy for Biomedical Applications Using FEM and Taguchi Design
Computational Investigation of Friction Stir Processing of Ti-6Al-4V Alloy for Biomedical Applications Using FEM and Taguchi Design
Nebojša Zdravković, Dragan S. Džunić, Živana Jovanovic Pešić et al.
30 de junio de 2026
en

Abstract

Friction stir processing (FSP) is an advanced solid-state surface modification technique for biomedical titanium alloys. This study presents a computational investigation of FSP applied to Ti-6Al-4V alloy through three-dimensional finite element modeling and Taguchi-based statistical optimization. A Taguchi L9 orthogonal array evaluated rotational speed (400–1000 rpm), traverse speed (50–100 mm/min), shoulder diameter (6–18 mm), and pin diameter (2–6 mm), reducing the required simulations from 81 (full factorial) to nine (88.9% reduction). A calibrated friction model (μ = 0.35/0.25/0.20 for 400/800/1000 rpm, F = 6000 N) yielded maximum temperatures of 870–1384 °C; all predicted temperatures remained below the melting point of Ti-6Al-4V (1660 °C). These values are consistent with experimentally reported ranges for FSW/FSP of Ti-6Al-4V. Traverse speed is the dominant parameter (ANOVA contribution: 63.1%, F = 10.44), followed by rotational speed (26.7%) and shoulder diameter (4.1%). Simulation 3 (400 rpm, 100 mm/min, Ds = 18 mm, T_max = 870 °C) appears to be the most promising thermal condition for preserving the fine-grained α + β microstructure, as it remains below the β-transus temperature (980 °C) throughout the processed zone.

IPC Classification

A61

Keywords

computationalinvestigationfrictionstirprocessingti-6al-4valloybiomedicalapplicationstaguchidesigncomputationadvancedsolid-statesurfacemodificationtechniquetitaniumalloyspresentsappliedthroughthree-dimensionalfinite
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