Quality Analysis of Friction Stir Welded Butt Joints by Means of Experiments and Simulations

2012 ◽  
Vol 504-506 ◽  
pp. 759-764 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianluca D'Urso ◽  
Michela Longo ◽  
Claudio Giardini ◽  
Elisabetta Ceretti

Friction Stir Welding (FSW) is a solid-state welding process introduced and developed in last decades. In this process a rotating tool is pressed on the two parts to be welded (mainly two plates), driven into the material and then translated along the parts interface. Academic and industrial interest is focused on the characteristics of the joined part in terms of mechanical resistance and fatigue resistance of the joints. These characteristics are heavily related to the process parameters chosen since the material stirring and the material temperature greatly depend on the pin rotating and translating speed. In fact, the stirring phenomena and the friction acting between the shoulder of the pin and the sheets, greatly increase the part temperature so that the material greatly changes its structural characteristics due to softening effect: grain dimensions, local hardness, grain orientation. Moreover, due to the physical material movement different types of defects (mainly voids) can be present in the welded zone (nugget). In particular three different areas can be identified: the heat affected zone (HAZ), the thermo-mechanical affect zone (TMAZ) and the nugget. The extension and the characteristics of these zone are very important in order to define the joint quality. These investigations are very important especially when FSW is applied in industrial fields such as aerospace, automotive and naval. To cut and to investigate an experimentally obtained joint is interesting for understanding the weld quality, but FEM simulation of the process can add very useful information in defining how the process parameter influence the joint behaviour and the three different zone extensions. As an example the heat flux, and consequently the temperature distribution inside the material, depend on the combination of rotation and welding speeds. For this reason, in the last years several efforts were oriented to the numerical simulation of the process, in order to investigate thermo-mechanical aspects, stress and strain distributions, thermal flow, residual stresses. The present paper deals with the set up of a FE model for the simulation of the FSW process whose results are correlated with the experimental observations carried out when joining AA6060-T6 aluminium alloy plates 5mm thick with a cylindrical tool with flat shoulder. The experimental campaign was performed under different welding conditions varying the tool rotational speed and the welding speed. A three-dimensional piezoelectric load cell was used to measure the welding forces in the main directions. The numerical model was developed and set up in DEFORM 3D environment. The information obtained from the model helped in the understanding of the welding phenomena.

2014 ◽  
Vol 783-786 ◽  
pp. 1788-1793
Author(s):  
Sebastian Schulze ◽  
G. Göbel ◽  
V. Richter-Trummer ◽  
U. Füssel ◽  
Eckhard Beyer

In order to industrialize friction stir welding (FSW) processes, not only the machine concept itself needs to be evaluated, but also the robustness of the process application being carried out on the machine. Especially for FSW of medium-sized and larger parts, a small degree of misalignment can have an increasing influence on the weld quality. Therefore an exemplary tolerance study for friction stir welded butt joints was conducted. The intentional introduction of gaps between the sheets to be welded can limit the welding process and thus the weld quality. However, for the considered experimental set-up it can be shown that the introduction of a well-defined gap can support the welding process and weld quality. The experimental procedure was carried out on a parallel kinematic machine - a so-called Pentapod. This machine is suitable for large and complex three-dimensional structures. Although the machine is able to record the process forces (Fx, Fy and Fz) acting on the tool–work piece interface, the forces acting perpendicular to the clamping system are still unknown. Therefore additional load cells were integrated into the clamping system to measure the in-process reaction forces. The combined results of the force measurements give a nearly complete overview of the internal loads during the process. In conjunction with knowledge about gaps and misalignment, the data gained in this study can help to understand and predict the clamping behaviour, and thus design rules for future clamping systems can be derived.


2016 ◽  
Vol 1138 ◽  
pp. 113-118
Author(s):  
Monica Iordache ◽  
Eduard Nitu ◽  
Claudiu Badulescu ◽  
Doina Iacomi ◽  
Lia Nicoleta Boţilă ◽  
...  

Friction Stir Welding (FSW) is a solid state joining process realized by the interaction between a non-consumable welding tool that rotates on the contact surfaces of the combined parts. Welding dissimilar materials aluminum and copper by FSW are of great interest because Al and Cu are two most common engineering materials widely used in many industries. This paper presents an investigation concerning the influence of the rotation of the tool on temperatures during the welding process. Also, the welding of copper and aluminum materials by FSW process was simulated using a finite element model. Three-dimensional FE model has been developed in ABAQUS/Explicit using the Coupled Eulerian Lagrangian method, the Johnson–Cook material law and the Coulomb’s Law of friction and was validated by infrared thermography method and thermocouple measurement.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 247-254
Author(s):  
Darko Veljic ◽  
Bojan Medjo ◽  
Marko Rakin ◽  
Zoran Radosavljevic ◽  
Nikola Bajic

Temperature, plastic strain and heat generation during the plunge stage of the friction stir welding (FSW) of high-strength aluminium alloys 2024 T3 and 2024 T351 are considered in this work. The plunging of the tool into the material is done at different rotating speeds. A three-dimensional finite element (FE) model for thermomechanical simulation is developed. It is based on arbitrary Lagrangian-Eulerian formulation, and Johnson-Cook material law is used for modelling of material behaviour. From comparison of the numerical results for alloys 2024 T3 and 2024 T351, it can be seen that the former has more intensive heat generation from the plastic deformation, due to its higher strength. Friction heat generation is only slightly different for the two alloys. Therefore, temperatures in the working plate are higher in the alloy 2024 T3 for the same parameters of the plunge stage. Equivalent plastic strain is higher for 2024 T351 alloy, and the highest values are determined under the tool shoulder and around the tool pin. For the alloy 2024 T3, equivalent plastic strain is the highest in the influence zone of the tool pin.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1082 ◽  
pp. 123-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger Navarro Verastegui ◽  
José Antonio Esmerio Mazzaferro ◽  
Cíntia Cristiane Petry Mazzaferro ◽  
Telmo Roberto Strohaecker ◽  
Jorge Fernandez Dos Santos

The main objective of the current work was to produce sound Refill FSSW joints between AA6181-T4 aluminum and DP600 steel plates. The steel plates were used in two different surface conditions: with and without galvanized surface layer. The Taguchi statistical method was used to find out the set of parameters indicated to produce joint with higher mechanical resistance. Then, the possibility of joining these dissimilar metals using the Refill FSSW process was verified. Tool rotation speed and welding time were varied to observe its effect over the joint behavior. The results of lap shear tests showed that galvanized layers do not cause any substantial change on the final joint mechanical resistance, even though different joining mechanisms had been observed.


Author(s):  
Chenyu Zhao ◽  
Xun Liu

Abstract Three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics models are developed to understand physical principles of self-reacting friction stir welding process. A novel approach of predicting the weld microstructure based on plastic strain distribution at cross-section behind the tool is proposed and verified with experimental results. Limitations and credibility of shear stress and velocity tool/workpiece boundary condition are evaluated from the perspective of the weld formation mechanism. The importance of the shear layer and its sticking/sliding transition state in weld formation mechanism is emphasized. From modeling perspective, shear stress boundary, which only represents a sliding condition, neglects the movement and effects of this shear layer. When shear layer is formed, due to the velocity discontinuity which could not be captured in fluid model, velocity boundary condition, which represents an averaging effect of sticking/sliding transition between tool and shear layer, is needed.


2011 ◽  
Vol 230-232 ◽  
pp. 1255-1259
Author(s):  
T. Khairuddin Jauhari ◽  
I.P. Almanar ◽  
Hussain Zuhailawati

Major works concentrated on the energy conversion from mechanical friction work to heat; emphasized on the immediate contact surface of work material and rotating welding tool but with no in-depth analytical study to relate the loads that are transferred to the work material and the welding fixture especially at early stage of heat generation. In this work, a mathematical model is developed to predict three-dimensional force components and axial torque of the rotating tool based on contact mechanic principle in relation to Al6061 temperature-dependent material properties. The model shows the ability to be possibly adapted for different metallic material and physical properties. It suggests the exerted torque and loads calculation endured by work material involving friction and shear mechanism of two static-dynamic contacting surface; rotating rotational tool and the fixed work material, to be used as one of the option for optimization of the welding process such as to determine the ratio of slip, non-slip contact condition through comparisons of experimental and computer simulation on the Friction Stir Welding process.


2009 ◽  
Vol 419-420 ◽  
pp. 433-436 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Jie Sun ◽  
Yong Zang ◽  
Qing Yu Shi

A sequential coupled three-dimensional thermo-mechanical analysis was conducted first to simulate friction stir welding (FSW) of aluminum alloy. In thermal analysis, the model included adaptive heat source, contact heat transfer both between work piece and clamps and between work piece and backing board etc; in the mechanical analysis, the model involved contact interaction both between work piece and clamps and between work piece and backing board, mechanical load of tool etc. The simulation results indicate that the longitudinal residual stress is unsymmetrical about weld centerline; the magnitude of longitudinal residual stress for FSW process is lower than that for fusion welding process. Based on simulated results of FSW process, a three-dimensional elastic-plastic analysis was then carried out to simulate rolling process, the simulation result show that rolling process not only causes a marked reduction in the longitudinal tensile residual but also reverse the sign of the longitudinal residual stress.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-170
Author(s):  
Y. G. Lyudmirsky ◽  
А. N. Soloviev ◽  
М. V. Soltovets ◽  
R. R. Kotlyshev ◽  
I. V. Mironov ◽  
...  

Introduction. Friction stir welding is widely used due to certain advantages of this method. Factors that reduce the strength of joints made of high-strength aluminum alloys are considered. When welding flat sheets, an effective way to increase the strength of the weld is edge thickening. The paper proposes a method for such thickening. A device is developed, calculations and experiments are carried out. Materials and Methods. Laboratory equipment has been developed to provide simultaneous thickening of two edges to be welded. The main component of this equipment is a steel roller, which is rolled along the edges of two blanks and thickens them due to plastic deformation. The same setup can be used for the friction stir welding process. To calculate the geometry of the thickened edges and the parameters of the deforming roller depending on the value of the edge settlement, a mathematical model based on the contact problem for elastic (roller) and elastoplastic (blank) bodies with a bilinear hardening law has been developed. A three-dimensional simplified geometric model of the facility with account of its symmetry has been constructed. On the contact surfaces, special contact finite elements were selected and the finite element mesh was refined. The numerical implementation of the model was carried out in the ANSYS package. Results. The theoretical model provides assessing the stress-strain state of interacting elements. On the basis of the developed finite element model, the parameters of the thickened edges are calculated, and the geometry of the thickened edges is defined. Using the developed laboratory equipment, full-scale experiments on thickening the edges of the blanks were carried out. The experimental results confirm the adequacy of the developed theoretical model and calculations based on it. The possibility of adjusting the size of the thickened edges is shown.Discussion and Conclusion. A technology for obtaining thickened edges in places of welds is proposed. It will reduce the metal consumption of structures and ensure the bearing capacity of welded joints not lower than similar characteristics of the base metal. A theoretical model of the process is developed, and a numerical experiment providing the selection of the process parameters is carried out. 


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