Grain Refinement in Medium Chromium Ferritic Stainless Steel Welds via Aluminum Powder Addition

2012 ◽  
Vol 445 ◽  
pp. 717-722 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.O.H. Amuda ◽  
S. Mridha

Grain refinement in medium chromium ferritic stainless steel weld was attempted via elemental (aluminum) powder pre-placement technique prior to melting under a TIG torch. A Box-Behnken experimental design was adopted with current, travel speed and the amount of aluminum powder added as the process factors for producing weld pool. The resolidified weld tracks were characterized using microscopy, microhardness and mechanical testing. The degree of grain refinement achieved was evaluated using a scaling index known as Grain Refinement Index (GRI). The findings showed that the GRI is influenced by the concentration of the aluminum powder introduced into the melt pool. Furthermore, high GRI does not necessarily translate to better mechanical properties relative to the conventional weld. This suggests that the grain size effect might not be the only factor influencing the property of weld metal. However, weld track treated with 0.08mg/mm2 of aluminum powder exhibited about 20% improvement in properties relative to the conventional weld made under the same energy conditions.

2012 ◽  
Vol 576 ◽  
pp. 496-499
Author(s):  
M.O.H. Amuda ◽  
S. Mridha

The paper discusses sensitization characteristics in medium chromium Ferritic Stainless Steel (FSS) welds processed at two different grain refining conditions namely metal powder addition and cryogenic cooling. Tungsten Inert Gas (TIG) torch welded samples were exposed to 10% oxalic acid electrolytic etch for evaluation of sensitization. Empirical analysis indicated that, though both the grain refining conditions reduced the sensitization width relative to the conventional weld, the width was virtually nil with cryogenic cooling suggesting the elimination or reduction of sensitization. Similarly, the microstructure of cryogenically cooled welds showed no ditched grain boundary but aluminum powder treated welds revealed extensive ditching and none in titanium treated welds while knifeline attack was observed in welds treated with the mixture of aluminum and titanium powders.


Author(s):  
Muhammed O. H. Amuda ◽  
Taiwo Folorunsho Lawal ◽  
Shahjahan Mridha

To further previous works on grain refinement in ferritic stainless steel (FSS) welds via elemental powder addition, microstructure evolution and mechanical properties in non-metallic carbide treated FSS weld is discussed. Silicon carbide (SiC) powder preplaced on medium chromium FSS bevelled joint was fusion melted using tungsten inert gas (TIG) torch at different combination of process parameters. The incorporation of the powder in the weld pool constricted the weld geometry in addition to grain modification from columnar to equiaxed grain structure. Whilst significant improvement was obtained in hardness characteristics in powder treated welds, those of ductility and tensile strength were marginal. The study also established that welds mechanical properties are controlled by a combination of phenomena such as phase fraction and grain morphology.


2009 ◽  
Vol 83-86 ◽  
pp. 1165-1172 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.O.H. Amuda ◽  
S. Mridha

The ferritic stainless steel is a low cost alternative to the most often adopted austenitic stainless steel due to its higher strength, better ductility and superior corrosion resistance in caustic and chloride environments. However, the application of ferritic steel is limited because of poor ductility and notch impact toughness of its weld section with differential grain structures. Several techniques have been explored to control the grain features of the weld to minimize these problems. In the present effort, a review of these options in relation to the degree of grain refinement in ferritic stainless steel weld is conducted in order to have a better understanding about the grain refining phenomenon in the weld microstructure. So far, the most effective technique is found to be the pulse AC TIG welding which can produce weld with mechanical properties equivalent to 65% to those of the base metal. The refinement in this process occurred through dendrite fragmentation and grain detachment in the weld pool producing small-grained microstructures with a large fraction of equiaxed grains. However, in friction welding process where heat input and heat transfer are effectively controlled, the strength can be as high as 95% of the parent metal. This suggests that the total energy input for welding and heat transfer phenomenon mainly control the development of microstructural feature in the weld pool and hence the strength.


2021 ◽  
Vol 194 ◽  
pp. 113690
Author(s):  
A. Durga ◽  
Niklas Holländer Pettersson ◽  
Sri Bala Aditya Malladi ◽  
Zhuoer Chen ◽  
Sheng Guo ◽  
...  

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