Modeling and On-Line Estimation of Electrode Wear in Resistance Spot Welding

2004 ◽  
Vol 127 (4) ◽  
pp. 709-717 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Li

Electrode wear is inherent in the resistance spot welding process. It determines the electrical and mechanical contact condition and thus strongly affects the resistance spot weld quality. A practical approach to minimizing the electrode wear effect is to compensate the welding current as the electrodes wear. However, the existing methods for welding current compensation rely on either a predetermined stepper schedule or an expulsion detection algorithm. These methods are not reliable since the welding current is not determined based on the contact condition for each weld made in the welding process. This paper presents an on-line electrode wear estimation approach to determining the contact condition and the welding current needed to make every weld a good weld during the entire life of the electrodes. In the study, an incrementally coupled finite element simulation was first formulated to analyze the contact area behavior in the resistance spot welding process. A lumped parameter model was then developed to characterize the contact area change with the dynamic resistance measurement. A calibration and an estimation algorithm were subsequently devised for on-line applications. The proposed approach has been validated with experimental data. The results have shown that the estimation algorithm is robust under various process conditions including both welding current and electrode force.

Manufacturing ◽  
2002 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Li

Contact areas at both electrode-to-sheet and sheet-to-sheet interfaces are important in the resistance spot welding process. Given electrode force and welding time, contact areas strongly affect the amount of electrical current needed to make a good weld. In production, process variation such as electrode wear and misalignment causes the contact areas to vary. This effect contributes largely to the quality variation of resistance spot welds. This paper proposes a model-based approach to contact area estimation in the resistance spot welding process. A finite element analysis procedure is used to characterize the contact area behaviors. Based on the understanding from the simulations, a lumped parameter model, together with its calibration and estimation procedures, is developed for on-line applications. The proposed method is demonstrated successful under various process conditions including electrode size, force, welding time and current. It provides important information for on-line monitoring and control of the resistance spot welding process.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 181-185
Author(s):  
Amit Hazari ◽  
Rith Saha ◽  
Bidisha Ghosh ◽  
Debraj Sengupta ◽  
Sayan Sarkar ◽  
...  

The spot welding procedure is used in a variety of industrial applications. The most critical elements influencing welding quality, productivity, and cost are the spot welding parameters. This research examines the effect of welding factors such as welding current and welding time on the strength of various welding joint designs. Resistance spot welding (RSW) is used in the automotive industry for manufacturing. This research focused on the optimization of process parameters for resistance spot welding (RSW), as well as the tensile testing and spot weld diameter. The goals of this analysis are to comprehend the physics of the process and to demonstrate the effect of electrical current, weld time, and material type on the resistance spot welding process.


Author(s):  
Wei Li ◽  
Daniel Cerjanec

This paper presents a comparative study of the AC and MFDC resistance spot welding process. Two identical welders were used; one with a single phase AC and the other with a median frequency DC weld control. Both welders were instrumented such that the primary and secondary voltage and current could be collected. A nugget growth experiment was conducted to compare the weld size and energy consumption in the AC and MFDC welding processes. It is found that the MFDC process generally produces larger welds with the same welding current. However, this difference is more prominent when the welding current is low. Overall the AC welding process consumes more energy to make a same size weld. The larger the welding current is used, the less efficient the AC process becomes.


2011 ◽  
Vol 216 ◽  
pp. 666-670 ◽  
Author(s):  
Prachya Peasura

This research was study the effect of resistance spot welding process on physical properties. The specimen was austenitic stainless steel sheet of 1 mm. The experiments with 23 factorial design. The factors used in this study are welding current at 8,000 and 12,000 Amp, welding time at 8 and 12 cycle and electrode force were set at 1.5 and 2.5 kN. The welded specimens were tested by tensile shear testing according to JIS Z 3136: 1999 and macro structure testing according to JIS Z 3139: 1978. The result showed that the welding current, welding time and electrode force had interaction on tensile shear and nugget size at 95% confidential (P value < 0.05). Factors affecting the tensile shear are the most welding current of 12,000 amp., welding time of 8 cycle and electrode force of 2.5 kN. were tensile shear of 9.83 kN. The nugget size was maximum at 7.15 mm. on welding current of 12,000 amp., welding time of 12 cycle and electrode force of 1.5 kN This research can bring information to the foundation in choosing the appropriate parameters to resistance spot welding process.


2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rinsei Ikeda ◽  
Yasuaki Okita ◽  
Moriaki Ono ◽  
Koichi Yasuda ◽  
Toshio Terasaki

Author(s):  
M. Abu-Aesh ◽  
Moataza Hindy

Extensive work had been conducted on spot-welding due to its rapidly increasing industrial importance. The resistance spot-welding involves complicated phenomena, as several effects are found in the process, e.g., temperature, surface roughness, pressure, and eddy current effects. Most of the work exerted for analyzing the spot-welding process neglect the effect of the eddy current generated during the flow of the huge welding main current through the assembly of electrodes and work sheets. This work presents an analytical method to investigate the generation of eddy current and to determine the total effective welding current in spot-welding. The current distribution on the work sheet when it is fed by a conducting electrode is also investigated. The obtained current formula is based on electromagnetic principles, where a very strong magnetic field is generated in the core of the electrodes as well as in the materials of work sheets due to the flow of very high amperage. The final resultant effective current is the superposition of the electrode welding current and the induced eddy current in the electrode and work piece assembly. The results offer a viable mathematical model, which can be applied for a precise prediction of the effective value of welding current in spot-welding processes, if applied in a comprehensive model including all involved effects.


1999 ◽  
Vol 122 (3) ◽  
pp. 511-512 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Li ◽  
S. Jack Hu ◽  
Jun Ni

A neural network model is developed for on-line nugget size estimation in resistance spot welding. The variables used consist of features extracted from both controllable process input variables and on-line signals. A systematic signal and feature selection procedure is developed. The three commonly observed on-line signals, dynamic resistance, force, and electrode displacement, have been proven to carry similar information. Thus, only dynamic resistance is used in the model. The obtained model has been demonstrated to be robust over various welding conditions including electrode wear. [S1087-1357(00)01204-1]


2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yanhua Ma ◽  
Pei Wu ◽  
Chuanzhong Xuan ◽  
Yongan Zhang ◽  
He Su

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