scholarly journals Anisotropic Torsion Strength of Round Bar A6061 Friction Weld Joint with Various Upset Pressures

Author(s):  
Yudy Surya Irawan ◽  
David Febri Alfian ◽  
Endi Sutikno
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yudy Surya Irawan ◽  
Muhammad Amirullah ◽  
Galih Bramantya Dian Gumilang ◽  
Tjuk Oerbandono ◽  
Wahyono Suprapto

Author(s):  
Saburo Okazaki ◽  
Hisao Matsunaga ◽  
Shigeru Hamada ◽  
Masami Nakamura ◽  
Hisatake Itoga ◽  
...  

A case study was conducted on the cooling pipe of a precooler which had been used in a 70-MPa hydrogen station demonstration project. The cooling pipe consisted of a main pipe, a mechanical joint pipe and a mechanical joint. The main and mechanical joint pipes had been joined using TIG welding. Through chemical composition analysis, microstructure observation and Vickers hardness measurement, it was revealed that the main and mechanical joint pipes had been manufactured from SUS316L and that 316L was the filler metal used for TIG welding. Round-bar specimens were machined out of the main pipe in order to investigate the tensile properties of the base metal. On the other hand, both round-bar specimen without reinforcement and square-bar specimens with reinforcement were fabricated from the weld-joint. Using the three types of specimens, slow strain rate tensile tests were performed in 0.1 MPa nitrogen gas and in 115 MPa hydrogen gas at a temperature of −40 °C. Reduction of area (RA), φ, for the round base-metal specimen, the round weld-joint specimen and the square weld-joint specimen were respectively, 83.5 %, 71.3 % and 81.4 % in nitrogen gas, whereas the related values in hydrogen gas were 60.1 %, 61.3 % and 40.1 %. In other words, the RA for the three types of specimens was smaller in hydrogen gas than in nitrogen gas. Dimples were formed on the fracture surfaces of the three specimen types in nitrogen gas, whereas both dimples and quasi-cleavages were formed in hydrogen gas.


2012 ◽  
Vol 576 ◽  
pp. 761-765 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yudy Surya Irawan ◽  
Marsoedi Wirohardjo ◽  
Mochamad Syamsul Ma’arif

Tensile strength of Aluminum A6061 joint produced by spinning friction welding (SFW) with various chamfer angles was studied. Tensile strength test specimens that have weld joint part at their centers were machined from spinning friction welded base metals. SFW specimens were prepared by making various chamfer angles of 15, 30, 45, 60, 75 degree and without chamfer angle on both contact-surfaces of base materials. It was found that chamfer angle affected tensile strength of weld joint of Aluminum A6061. Base materials with chamfer angle of 30 degree resulted in specimen that had the maximum tensile strength of friction weld joint. From the result of macrostructure evaluation, it was found that high strength in these specimens was due to the maximum area of fully plasticized zone, minimum porosity and minimum area of heat-affected zone.


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