Abstract
Multiaxial low-cycle fatigue (MLCF) behavior of laser powder bed fused (L-PBF) Ti-6Al-4V was systematically investigated with four building direction (BD) in this paper. Proportional and non-proportional strain-controlled MLCF tests characterized cyclic softening and fracture mechanisms. L-PBF Ti-6Al-4V exhibits three-stage cyclic softening with occasional initial hardening, while non-proportional softening predominates, contrasting with conventional titanium alloys. Macro-micro characterization reveals that defect density and cleavage morphology strongly influence fatigue performance across BD. Fatigue life was predicted using analytical models (FS and KBMP) and a hybrid physics- and data-driven VAE-ANN model. While the KBMP model improves predictions over FS, both fail to fully account for BD effects. Incorporating macro-micro features, the VAE-ANN model achieves highly accurate MLCF life predictions within 10% error. These results highlight the critical roles of BD and microstructural characteristics in governing the MLCF behavior of L-PBF Ti-6Al-4V.