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Keywords = laser wire filling welding

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23 pages, 10666 KiB  
Article
Weldability Assessment of Austenitic/Ferritic Clad Plates Joined by a Combined Laser Beam–Electric Arc Process
by Girolamo Costanza, Fabio Giudice, Severino Missori, Cristina Scolaro, Andrea Sili and Maria Elisa Tata
J. Manuf. Mater. Process. 2025, 9(3), 90; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp9030090 - 11 Mar 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 857
Abstract
The combined use of laser beam and electric arc for welding thick clad steel plates in a single pass has been developed to solve the issues concerning the individual applications of the heat sources, such as the low filling efficiency of conventional electric [...] Read more.
The combined use of laser beam and electric arc for welding thick clad steel plates in a single pass has been developed to solve the issues concerning the individual applications of the heat sources, such as the low filling efficiency of conventional electric arc methods and the drawbacks concerning laser beam defects due to rapid cooling and solidification. This work was addressed to the weldability assessment of ferritic steel plates, clad with austenitic stainless steel, under the laser-leading configuration, testing the effects of two different values of the inter-distance between the laser beam and the electric arc. Specimens of the welded zone were investigated by metallographic observations and EDS measurements; mechanical properties were characterized by the Vickers microhardness test and by the FIMEC instrumented indentation test to obtain the local values of the yield strength. Welding simulations by theoretical modelling were also carried out to outline the differences in the thermal fields generated by the two heat sources, their interaction, and their effect on the configurations of the weld pool and the thermal profiles to which the materials are subjected. The welding setup with higher inter-distance was more suitable for joining clad steel plates, since the action of the deep keyhole mode is substantially separated from that of the shallower electric arc. In this way, the addition of alloying elements, performed by melting the filler wire, concentrated in the cladding layer, helping maintain the austenitic microstructure, while the laser beam acts in depth along the thickness, autogenously welding the base steel. Full article
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16 pages, 5358 KiB  
Article
High-Entropy Alloy Laser Cladding with Cable-Type Welding Wire: Experimental Study and First-Principles Calculations
by Wenjun Wang, Yifei Zheng, Zhihui Cai, Wenjian Zheng, Cai Zhang, Yu Wang, Zhiyong Zhao, Daochen Feng, Yinghe Ma and Jianguo Yang
Metals 2024, 14(11), 1294; https://doi.org/10.3390/met14111294 - 16 Nov 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1298
Abstract
The Co-Cr-Fe-Ni high-entropy alloy (HEA) is particularly suitable for preparing coatings due to its excellent comprehensive properties. In this study, we use the laser cladding method to prepare Co-Cr-Fe-Ni HEA coatings with Co-Cr-Fe-Ni cable-type welding wire (CTWW) as the filling material and investigated [...] Read more.
The Co-Cr-Fe-Ni high-entropy alloy (HEA) is particularly suitable for preparing coatings due to its excellent comprehensive properties. In this study, we use the laser cladding method to prepare Co-Cr-Fe-Ni HEA coatings with Co-Cr-Fe-Ni cable-type welding wire (CTWW) as the filling material and investigated the dilution rates of the coatings by experimental studies and first-principles calculations. The dilution rate is reduced to about 50% by changing the wire feeding speed, and a Co-Cr-Fe-Ni HEA coating with near nominal composition was prepared by multi-layer cladding. The HEA coating with near nominal composition is successfully prepared in the fourth layer of cladding. The coating is dense and uniform, with good metallurgical bonding. The mechanical properties of the coating were explored using first-principles calculations. All four coatings exhibit a single face-centered cubic (FCC) phase with good mechanical stability in the ground state. The bulk modulus B, shear modulus G, and Young’s modulus E of the four layers of coatings are gradually decreasing from B = 202 GPa, G = 136 GPa, and E = 334 GPa to B = 239 GPa, G = 154 GPa, and E = 380 GPa. The brittleness of the coating shows a trend of first decreasing and then increasing, and the coating closest to the nominal composition has the highest brittleness. Full article
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14 pages, 9611 KiB  
Article
Research on the Low-Temperature Impact Toughness of a New 100-mm Ultra-Thick Offshore Steel Fabricated Using the Narrow-Gap Laser Wire Filling Welding Process
by Zhong-Lin Hou, Hai-Quan Guo, Jia-Ji Wang, Zeng-Yang Huang, Ze-An Wang, Di-Sheng Fang and Jun Qiao
Materials 2024, 17(6), 1363; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17061363 - 16 Mar 2024
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1650
Abstract
Ultra-thick offshore steel, known for its high strength, high toughness, and corrosion resistance, is commonly used in marine platforms and ship components. However, when offshore steel is in service for an extended period under conditions of high pressure, extreme cold, and high-frequency impact [...] Read more.
Ultra-thick offshore steel, known for its high strength, high toughness, and corrosion resistance, is commonly used in marine platforms and ship components. However, when offshore steel is in service for an extended period under conditions of high pressure, extreme cold, and high-frequency impact loads, the weld joints are prone to fatigue failure or even fractures. Addressing these issues, this study designed a narrow-gap laser wire filling welding process and successfully welded a 100-mm new type of ultra-thick offshore steel. Using finite element simulation, EBSD testing, SEM analysis, and impact experiments, this study investigates the weld’s microstructure, impact toughness, and fracture mechanisms. The research found that at −80 °C, the welded joint exhibited good impact toughness (>80 J), with the impact absorption energy on the surface of the weld being 217.7 J, similar to that of the base material (225.3 J), and the fracture mechanism was primarily a ductile fracture. The impact absorption energy in the core of the weld was 103.7 J, with the fracture mechanism mainly being a brittle fracture. The EBSD results indicated that due to the influence of the welding thermal cycle and the cooling effect of the narrow-gap process, the grains gradually coarsened from the surface of the welded plate to the core of the weld, which was the main reason for the decreased impact toughness at the joint core. This study demonstrates the feasibility of using narrow-gap laser wire filling welding for 100-mm new type ultra-thick offshore steel and provides a new approach for the joining of ultra-thick steel plates. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Metals and Alloys)
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13 pages, 7175 KiB  
Article
Study on Porosity Defect Detection in Narrow Gap Laser Welding Based on Spectral Diagnosis
by Jinping Liu, Baoping Xu, Yingchao Feng, Peng Chen, Cancan Yan, Zhuyuan Li, Kaisong Yang, Kun She and Yiming Huang
Materials 2023, 16(14), 4989; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16144989 - 13 Jul 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2407
Abstract
As an advanced connection technology for large thick-walled components, narrow gap laser welding has the advantages of small heat input and high efficiency and quality. However, porosity defects are prone to occur inside the weld due to the complex welding environment. In this [...] Read more.
As an advanced connection technology for large thick-walled components, narrow gap laser welding has the advantages of small heat input and high efficiency and quality. However, porosity defects are prone to occur inside the weld due to the complex welding environment. In this study, the influence of the process parameters and pollutants such as water and oil on the porosity defect were explored. The action mechanism of water on the electron temperature and spectral intensity of the laser-induced plasma was analyzed. The results showed that the spectral intensity during narrow gap laser welding was weaker than that of flat plate butt welding. Under the optimal welding process conditions, the electron temperature during narrow gap laser self-fusion welding was calculated as 7413.3 K by the Boltzmann plot method. The electron density was 5.6714 × 1015 cm−3, conforming to the thermodynamic equilibrium state. With six groups of self-fusion welding parameters, only sporadic porosity defects were observed according to the X-ray detection. When there was water on the base metal surface, a large number of dense pores were observed on the weld surface and in the weld through X-ray inspection. Compared with the spectral data obtained under the normal process, the relative light intensity of the spectrometer in the whole band was reduced. The electron temperature decreased to the range of 6900 to 7200 K, while the electron density increased. The spectrum variation during narrow gap laser wire filling welding was basically the same as that of laser self-fusion welding. The porosity defects caused by water and oil pollutants in the laser welding could be effectively identified based on the intensity of the Fe I spectral lines. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Materials Processing for Engineering Applications)
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16 pages, 6354 KiB  
Article
A Comparative Study on Microstructural Characterization of Thick High Strength Low Alloy Steel Weld by Arc Welding and Laser Welding
by Yunxia Chen, Xiao Xu, Yanjing Liu and Haichao Cui
Materials 2023, 16(6), 2212; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16062212 - 9 Mar 2023
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2637
Abstract
Welding and the behavior of the weldments are important, since welding of high strength low alloy (HSLA) steels is a conventional method for manufacturing industrial parts. This work conducts a comparative investigation of microstructural characteristics and mechanical properties for joints of 16-mm-thick HSLA [...] Read more.
Welding and the behavior of the weldments are important, since welding of high strength low alloy (HSLA) steels is a conventional method for manufacturing industrial parts. This work conducts a comparative investigation of microstructural characteristics and mechanical properties for joints of 16-mm-thick HSLA Q890 steel produced by multi-layer multi-pass shielded metal arc welding (SMAW) with filler wire and single-layer autogenous laser beam welding (LBW). The mechanical properties of the welded joints were assessed in terms of tensile and impact using butt joints. The results show that tensile failure occurred in the base metal during the tensile tests for most of the trials. The ultimate tensile strength and percent elongation of the LBW welded joint (973.5 MPa and 10%) are higher than those of the SMAW joint (951 MPa and 2.9%) due to the filler filling process of the SMAW process. The Charpy impact energy of the weld metal (16.4 J and 15.1 J) is lower than that of the heat-affected zone (18.5 J and 19.5 J) in the LBW joint and the SMAW joint. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Physical Metallurgy of Metals and Alloys)
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13 pages, 10898 KiB  
Article
Study of the Microstructure and Properties of the Butt Joint of Laser-Welded Titanium Alloy with Flux-Cored Wire
by Mingqiu Wang, Naiwen Fang, Laibo Sun, Pengbo Wu, Ruisheng Huang, Kai Xu, Xingxing Wang, Jian Qin, Zhenzhen Zhou, Shuai Li, Jinhua Su and Weimin Long
Metals 2023, 13(2), 369; https://doi.org/10.3390/met13020369 - 12 Feb 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2062
Abstract
A self-developed Ti-Al-V-Mo system titanium alloy flux-cored wire was used to join the Ti64 titanium alloy plate via laser welding with filler wire. The microstructure and properties of the obtained welded joint were investigated. The results showed the WM (welded metal) of the [...] Read more.
A self-developed Ti-Al-V-Mo system titanium alloy flux-cored wire was used to join the Ti64 titanium alloy plate via laser welding with filler wire. The microstructure and properties of the obtained welded joint were investigated. The results showed the WM (welded metal) of the welded joint consisted mainly of acicular α’ martensite, and the HAZ (heat affected zone) was comprised of a primary αp phase, Widmanstatten, and a few α’ martensite and a residual β phase. The strength and elongation of the welded joint after breaking are equivalent to that of the BM (base metal). The tensile fracture, presenting as a microvoid coalescence ductile fracture, was encompassed by massive shear lips with deep and uniform dimples. The overall microhardness of the welded joint was sequenced as WM > HAZ > BM. In the WM, large-angle grain boundaries with intragranular misorientation greater than 15° accounted for about 84%. By XRD, it was discovered the welded joint was mainly composed of the α’ martensite, with a modest amount of extremely weak multi-angle α phase diffraction peak. The test results showed the designed welding method of titanium flux-cored wire and laser wire filling is suitable for high-quality welding of titanium alloy plate. Full article
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16 pages, 7898 KiB  
Article
Comparative Study on Laser Welding Thick-Walled TC4 Titanium Alloy with Flux-Cored Wire and Cable Wire
by Laibo Sun, Mingqiu Wang, Lujun Huang, Naiwen Fang, Pengbo Wu, Ruisheng Huang, Kai Xu, Xingxing Wang, Jian Qin, Shuai Li and Weimin Long
Materials 2023, 16(4), 1509; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16041509 - 10 Feb 2023
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 2384
Abstract
In the welding process of thick-walled titanium alloys, the selection of the wire type is one of the critical factors affecting the welding quality. In this paper, flux-cored and cable wires were used as filler materials in the welding of thick-walled titanium alloys. [...] Read more.
In the welding process of thick-walled titanium alloys, the selection of the wire type is one of the critical factors affecting the welding quality. In this paper, flux-cored and cable wires were used as filler materials in the welding of thick-walled titanium alloys. The macrostructure, microstructure, texture, and grain size of both welded joints were compared by employing an optical microscope (OM), scanning electron microscope (SEM), and transmission electron microscope (TEM), and the tensile and impact properties were also evaluated. The comparison result showed that the fusion zone microstructure of both welded joints was dominated by a basketweave structure composed of interwoven acicular α′ martensite, whereas the microstructure of flux-cored wire welded joints was finer, and the degree of anisotropy was low. The strength of both welded joints was higher than that of the base metal, ensuring that fracture occurred in the base metal area during tension. The Charpy impact energy of the flux-cored wire welded joint was 16.7% higher than that of the cable wire welded joint, indicating that the welded joint obtained with the flux-cored wire performed better in the welding process of thick-walled titanium alloys. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Metals and Alloys)
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14 pages, 79344 KiB  
Article
Dynamic Characteristics of Plasma in Ultrasonic-Assisted Narrow-Gap Laser Welding with Filler Wire
by Ren Wang, Zhenxing He, Xiaoyang Kan, Ke Li, Fugang Chen, Juan Fu and Yong Zhao
Materials 2023, 16(2), 502; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16020502 - 4 Jan 2023
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1816
Abstract
Laser welding with filler wire was applied to Q345D in a narrow gap under ultrasonic assistance, and the dynamic characteristics of plasma were studied by high-speed imaging and spectral acquisition. The results showed that the plasma area decreased gradually with increasing distance between [...] Read more.
Laser welding with filler wire was applied to Q345D in a narrow gap under ultrasonic assistance, and the dynamic characteristics of plasma were studied by high-speed imaging and spectral acquisition. The results showed that the plasma area decreased gradually with increasing distance between the ultrasonic loading position and welding seam. The electron density and temperature of the plasma with ultrasonic assistance were higher than those without ultrasound. The electron density was approximately 1016~1017 cm−3, and the plasma temperature was approximately 4000~6000 K. Ultrasonic assisted laser wire filling welding can bring about cavitation effect and significantly reduce the porosity problem. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Plasma and Laser Engineering)
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13 pages, 7058 KiB  
Article
Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Laser Narrow-Gap Multi-Pass Weld 20 mm-Thick Ti-6Al-4V Alloy with Different Filling Layers
by Shenghao Meng, Liqun Li, Changjian Si, Jianfeng Gong and Wang Tao
Crystals 2022, 12(7), 977; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst12070977 - 13 Jul 2022
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 2570
Abstract
In the narrow-gap multi-layer welding of thick Ti-6Al-4V titanium alloy sheets, reducing the number of filling layers can effectively improve the welding efficiency and reduce the possibility of interlayer defects. In order to explore the changes in the microstructure and properties of the [...] Read more.
In the narrow-gap multi-layer welding of thick Ti-6Al-4V titanium alloy sheets, reducing the number of filling layers can effectively improve the welding efficiency and reduce the possibility of interlayer defects. In order to explore the changes in the microstructure and properties of the weld after reducing the number of filling layers, Ti-6Al-4V titanium alloy sheets with a thickness of 20 mm were successfully welded using the oscillating laser beam mode by laser narrow-gap multi-pass wire filler welding in eight, six, four, and three layers, and all of the formations were good. To reduce the number of filling layers and increase the welding line energy from 0.4 kJ/mm to 1.2 kJ/mm, the melting depth and width of the single layer were changed from 4.3 mm to 10.6 mm, and 5.7 mm to 10.3 mm. The average grain size of the needle-shaped martensite increased from 1.83 μm to 2.38 μm, while the tensile strength of the filled weld area decreased from 1301.8 MPa to 1169.8 MPa, which was higher than that of the base metal of 902.1 MPa. Since there are more columnar crystals in the center of the weld at low heat input, the impact energy was 20.53 J (60.6% of the base metal) at room temperature and 15.76 J (65.9% of the base metal) at −50 C. Considering the weld formation, microstructure and mechanical property, welding four layers of fillers obtained with moderate line energy (0.8 kJ/mm) was more suitable. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Laser Melting of Metals and Metal Matrix Composites)
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11 pages, 5461 KiB  
Article
Narrow Gap Welding of X80 Steel Using Laser-CMT Hybrid Welding with Misaligned Laser and Arc
by Bofang Zheng, Yang Li, Sansan Ao, Xianlong Zhang, Di Zhang, Sunusi Marwana Manladan, Zhen Luo, Yue Yang and Yuanbo Bi
Crystals 2022, 12(6), 832; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst12060832 - 12 Jun 2022
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2566
Abstract
The feasibility of using laser-cold metal transfer (CMT) misaligned hybrid welding to join an X80 line-pipe steel in a narrow gap configuration was investigated. The laser beam interacted with the sidewall and its bottom at a small angle, while the CMT arc acted [...] Read more.
The feasibility of using laser-cold metal transfer (CMT) misaligned hybrid welding to join an X80 line-pipe steel in a narrow gap configuration was investigated. The laser beam interacted with the sidewall and its bottom at a small angle, while the CMT arc acted on the backside of the laser beam. The influence of the distance parameter between the laser spot and the tip of the welding wire on the formation and defects of the filled weld were investigated. Narrow gap bevel welds were performed, and the joints were tensile and had a satisfactory Charpy impact score. The tensile fracture is located in the base metal, and the impact fracture is a ductile fracture. Under this condition, the heat input could be efficiently reduced, preventing the formation of defects such as lack of fusion and reducing the number of pores. Additionally, welds with a narrow heat affect zone (HAZ) could be obtained. The results reveal that the hybrid process, as a low-heat input method, is suitable for narrow gap welding. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Determinants of Welding Performance of Crystalline Materials)
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12 pages, 4626 KiB  
Article
Ultra-Narrow Gap Fiber Laser Conduction Welding Technology for 304 Stainless Steel Thick Plates and the Mechanical Properties of Welding Joints
by Guowei Zhang and Feihu Yu
Coatings 2022, 12(1), 59; https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings12010059 - 5 Jan 2022
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 3325
Abstract
The application of thick metal plates is increasing, and the welding problem is becoming more and more prominent. Narrow gap laser welding is one of the important methods, and it is also a research hotspot. The stainless steel thick plates were welded using [...] Read more.
The application of thick metal plates is increasing, and the welding problem is becoming more and more prominent. Narrow gap laser welding is one of the important methods, and it is also a research hotspot. The stainless steel thick plates were welded using the ultra-narrow gap fiber laser conduction welding with filler wire. Results show that the ranges of technological parameters for the achievement of the weld seam with no defects are smaller when the gap width is comparatively larger. Using the optimized technological parameters, the butt welding with no defects on the 3 mm gap between two 304 stainless steel plates with 60 mm thickness was achieved through the filling 20 times. This welding method of 304 metal with large thickness is rare in the literature. The tensile strength of the welding joint can be up to 87% of that of the base metal, and the micro-hardness and yield strength of the joint are comparable with those of the base metal. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Laser Processing Effects on Special Steels and High Entropy Alloys)
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16 pages, 9094 KiB  
Article
Investigation on Microstructure and Properties of Duplex Stainless Steel Welds by Underwater Laser Welding with Different Shielding Gas
by Kai Wang, Changlei Shao, Xiangdong Jiao, Jialei Zhu, Zhihai Cai and Congwei Li
Materials 2021, 14(17), 4774; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14174774 - 24 Aug 2021
Cited by 15 | Viewed by 3555
Abstract
Taking S32101 duplex stainless steel as the research object, underwater laser wire filling welding technology was used for U-groove filling welding. The influence of different shielding gas compositions on the ferrite content, microstructure, mechanical properties and pitting corrosion resistance was studied by simulating [...] Read more.
Taking S32101 duplex stainless steel as the research object, underwater laser wire filling welding technology was used for U-groove filling welding. The influence of different shielding gas compositions on the ferrite content, microstructure, mechanical properties and pitting corrosion resistance was studied by simulating a water depth of 15 m in the hyperbaric chamber. The results show that, under the same process parameters, the size and proportion of austenite in the weld when using pure nitrogen as the shielding gas are larger than those protected by other shielding gases. In a mixed shielding gas, the increase in nitrogen content has little effect on the strength and toughness of the weld. Regardless of the shielding gas used, the base metal was the weakest part of the weld. At the same time, intermetallic inclusions have an adverse effect on the impact toughness of the weld. The pitting corrosion resistance of the welds depends on the Cr2N content in the heat-affected zone. The precipitation and enrichment of Cr2N causes local chromium deficiency, which is the main factor for the weak pitting corrosion ability of the heat-affected zone. Pure nitrogen protection has a better corrosion resistance than other gas protection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Metallurgical and Materials Engineering)
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18 pages, 12234 KiB  
Article
Research on Parameters of Wire-Filling Laser Welding and Quenching Process for Joints Microstructure and Mechanical Property of BR1500HS Steel
by Lianpu Zhou, Chundong Zhu, Rongfei Ma and Zihao Wei
Metals 2021, 11(7), 1047; https://doi.org/10.3390/met11071047 - 30 Jun 2021
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2517
Abstract
With the aim to investigate the effect of parameters and the quenching process on the joint microstructure and mechanical properties of hot stamping steel by laser welding, BR1500HS boron steel was welded by wire-filling laser welding with ER70-G welding wire under different parameters. [...] Read more.
With the aim to investigate the effect of parameters and the quenching process on the joint microstructure and mechanical properties of hot stamping steel by laser welding, BR1500HS boron steel was welded by wire-filling laser welding with ER70-G welding wire under different parameters. The welded specimens were heated to 900 °C and held for 5 min before water quenching. A universal material test machine, optical microscope, Vickers hardness tester, scanning electron microscope, and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) were used to characterize. The results show that the heat input should be greater than 1040 J/cm and the optimal wire-feeding speed is between 160 cm/min and 180 cm/min. The tensile strength of the quenched joint can reach greater than 1601.9 MPa at compatible parameters. More retained austenite distributes in the fusion zone (FZ) and fine grain zone (FGZ) than the coarse grain zone (CGZ) before quenching. However, the retained austenite in FZ and heat-affected zone (HAZ) decreases clearly and distributes uniformly after quenching. The grain diameter in FZ before quenching is not uniform and there are some coarse grains with the diameter greater than 40 μm. After quenching, the grains are refined and grain diameter is more uniform in the joint. With the increase in heat input, the microhardness of FZ and HAZ before quenching decreases from 500 HV to 450 HV. However, if the wire-feeding speed increases, the microhardness of FZ and HAZ before quenching increases from 450 HV to 500 HV. After quenching, the joint microhardness of all samples is between 450 HV and 550 HV. The fracture morphology of the joint before quenching consists of a large number of dimples and little river patterns. After quenching, the fracture morphology consists of a large amount of river patterns and cleavage facets due to the generation of martensite. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Metal Casting, Forming and Heat Treatment)
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17 pages, 39399 KiB  
Article
Wire-Feeding Laser Welding of Copper/Stainless Steel Using Different Filler Metals
by Xiaoyan Gu, Ziwei Cui, Xiaopeng Gu and Jiaxu Shao
Materials 2021, 14(9), 2122; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14092122 - 22 Apr 2021
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 3298
Abstract
Ni-based filler metal and Ni-Cu-based filler metal were used to obtain copper/stainless steel (Cu/SS) joints through wire-feeding laser welding. Along the SS/weld interface, there exist different grain sizes (from coarse columnar grains to fine equiaxed grains). The heat affected zone (HAZ) on the [...] Read more.
Ni-based filler metal and Ni-Cu-based filler metal were used to obtain copper/stainless steel (Cu/SS) joints through wire-feeding laser welding. Along the SS/weld interface, there exist different grain sizes (from coarse columnar grains to fine equiaxed grains). The heat affected zone (HAZ) on the copper side consisted of two areas with different grain sizes and the size of the grain in the Cu-HAZ of the Ni-Cu-based filled joint was much smaller than that of the Ni-based filled joint. Our results showed that grain refinement at the copper/weld (Cu/weld) interface of the Ni-Cu-based filled joint was observed through high-resolution electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD). There was a hardness elevation at the Cu/weld interface of the Ni-Cu-based filled joint due to the grain refinement on the weld of the copper side. The maximum tensile strength of the Ni-Cu-based filled joint was obtained and reached 91.2% of the tensile strength of the copper base metal (Cu-BM). Joints in this study were observed to fracture in a ductile mode. Furthermore, the Ni-Cu-based filled joint exhibited a higher plastic deformation, which was primarily caused by the large deformation of the weld zone and the large deformation of the Cu-BM due to the high plasticity of the weld, which alleviated the stress concentration, as indicated by 2D-digital image correlation (DIC) test results. Full article
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12 pages, 4487 KiB  
Article
Corrosion Resistance of 2060 Aluminum–Lithium Alloy LBW Welds Filled with Al-5.6Cu Wire
by Fencheng Liu, Xiaoguang Wang, Baosheng Zhou, Chunping Huang and Feiyue Lyu
Materials 2018, 11(10), 1988; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma11101988 - 15 Oct 2018
Cited by 16 | Viewed by 4277
Abstract
Alloy sheets of type 2060 aluminum–lithium were welded by laser beam welding (LBW) filled with ER2319 Al-5.6Cu wire. Microstructural observations showed the uneven distribution of columnar grains, equiaxed grains and equiaxed dendrite grains in the weld. The θ′(Al2Cu) phase and other [...] Read more.
Alloy sheets of type 2060 aluminum–lithium were welded by laser beam welding (LBW) filled with ER2319 Al-5.6Cu wire. Microstructural observations showed the uneven distribution of columnar grains, equiaxed grains and equiaxed dendrite grains in the weld. The θ′(Al2Cu) phase and other phases precipitated in the weld. The θ′(Al2Cu) phase centrally distributed at the grain boundaries. During the immersion corrosion, the pitting corrosion first occurred and then gradually expanded and transformed to intergranular corrosion and exfoliation corrosion. The electrochemical corrosion test showed a higher corrosion tendency of the base metal and heat-affected zone for the lower corrosion potential, but the corrosion current density of the weld was relatively larger. The segregation of Cu, Mg and other elements at the grain boundary aggravated the occurrence of intergranular corrosion. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Corrosion and Corrosion Protection for Light Metals/Alloys)
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