The dynamic behavior within the melt pool governs the final quality of components fabricated by laser powder bed fusion (LPBF). To address key technical challenges—rapid keyhole evolution, low absorption contrast from metal vapor, and difficulties in quantifying internal flow fields—this study introduces move contrast X-ray imaging (MCXI), a technique leveraging time-series frequency characteristics. Combined with a multi-scale Horn–Schunck global optical flow method, MCXI enables full-field quantitative extraction of the melt-pool velocity field. Experimental validation across feature points shows a relative deviation of less than 2% compared to independent manual feature-point tracking, confirming consistency with the best available experimental ground truth. Analysis reveals the keyhole tail evolution cycle comprises three distinct dynamic stages: expansion, stratification, and contraction, with its area increasing from 1329 μm2 to 6508 μm2 before stabilizing. For the first time, pore pinch-off events were quantitatively measured, revealing front and rear wall collision velocities of 7.98 m/s and 8.04 m/s, respectively, consistent with available high-fidelity simulations. Furthermore, analysis of the overall melt-pool momentum field demonstrates a near-equal distribution of positive and negative momentum, providing an internal self-consistency check confirming the absence of systematic directional bias in the extracted velocity field. This study enables quantitative analysis of LPBF melt-pool dynamics, providing a novel tool for process optimization and defect control.
Song et al. (Thu,) studied this question.