wavy interface
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2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 64
Author(s):  
Shunyi Zhang ◽  
Brad L. Kinsey

During magnetic pulsed welding (MPW), a wavy interface pattern can be observed. However, this depends on the specific material combination being joined. Some combinations, e.g., steel to aluminum, simply provide undulating waves, while others, e.g., titanium to copper, provide elegant vortices. These physical features can affect the strength of the joint produced, and thus a more comprehensive understanding of the material combination effects during MPW is required. To investigate the interfacial morphology and parent material properties dependency during MPW, tubular Al1100 and various copper alloy joints were fabricated. The influence of two material properties, i.e., yield strength and density, were studied, and the interface morphology features were visually investigated. Results showed that both material properties affected the interface morphology. Explicitly, decreasing yield strength (Cu101 and Cu110) led to a wavy interface, and decreasing density (Cu110 and CP-Ti) resulted in a wave interface with a larger wavelength. Numerical analyses were also conducted in LS-DYNA and validated the interface morphologies observed experimentally. These simulations show that the effect on shear stresses in the material is the cause of the interface morphology variations obtained. The results from this research provide a better fundamental understanding of MPW phenomena with respect to the effect of material properties and thus how to design an effective MPW application.


Author(s):  
Ping Yang ◽  
Xu Wang ◽  
Peter Schiavone

We achieve elastic cloaking for a periodic distribution of an infinite number of parallel finite mode III cracks by means of the complex variable method and the theory of Cauchy singular integral equations. The cloaking bimaterial structure is composed of an undisturbed uniformly stressed left half-plane perfectly bonded via a wavy interface to the right half-plane which contains periodic cracks. The original design of the wavy interface and the positions of the periodic cracks are ultimately reduced to the solution of a Cauchy singular integral equation which can be solved numerically.


Author(s):  
Jonghyuk Baek ◽  
Jiun-Shyan Chen ◽  
Guohua Zhou ◽  
Kevin P. Arnett ◽  
Michael C. Hillman ◽  
...  

AbstractThe explosive welding process is an extreme-deformation problem that involves shock waves, large plastic deformation, and fragmentation around the collision point, which are extremely challenging features to model for the traditional mesh-based methods. In this work, a particle-based Godunov shock algorithm under a semi-Lagrangian reproducing kernel particle method (SL-RKPM) is introduced into the volumetric strain energy to accurately embed the key shock physics in the absence of a mesh or grid, which is shown to also ensure the conservation of linear momentum. For kernel stability, a deformation-dependent anisotropic kernel support update algorithm is proposed, which is shown to capture excessive plastic flow and material separation. A quasi-conforming nodal integration is adopted to avoid the need of updating conforming cells which is tedious in extreme deformations. It is shown that the proposed formulation effectively captures shocks, jet formation, and smooth-to-wavy interface morphology transition with good agreement with experimental results.


2021 ◽  
Vol 165 ◽  
pp. 103861
Author(s):  
Naoki Tsuruta ◽  
Abbas Khayyer ◽  
Hitoshi Gotoh ◽  
Kojiro Suzuki

Author(s):  
Marcin Szmul ◽  
Katarzyna Stan-Glowinska ◽  
Marta Janusz-Skuza ◽  
Agnieszka Bigos ◽  
Andrzej Chudzio ◽  
...  

AbstractThis work presents a detailed description of a bonding zone of explosively welded Ti/steel clads subjected to stress relief annealing, applied in order to improve the plasticity of the final product. The typical joint formed by the welding process possesses a characteristic wavy interface with melted regions observed mainly at the crest regions of waves. The interface of Ti/steel clads before and after annealing was previously investigated mostly in respect to the melted regions. Here, a sharp interface between the waves was analyzed in detail. The obtained results indicate that the microstructure of a transition zone of that area is different along the width. After the heat treatment at 600 °C for 1.5 hours, titanium carbide (TiC) together with α-Fe phase forms at the interface in local areas of relatively wide interlayer (~ 1 µm), while for most of the sharp interface, a much thinner zone up to about 400 nm, formed by four sublayers containing intermetallic phase and carbides, is present. This confirms that carbon diffusion induced by applied heat treatment significantly influences the final microstructure of the Ti/steel interface zone. Side bending tests confirmed high plasticity of welds after applied heat treatment; however, the microhardness measurements indicated that the strengthening of the steel in the vicinity of the interface had not been removed completely.


Metals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 770 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matej Vesenjak ◽  
Masatoshi Nishi ◽  
Toshiya Nishi ◽  
Yasuo Marumo ◽  
Lovre Krstulović-Opara ◽  
...  

The paper focuses on the fabrication of novel aluminium cellular structures and their metallographic and mechanical characterisation. The aluminium UniPore specimens have been manufactured by rolling a thin aluminium foil with acrylic spacers for the first time. The novel approach allows for the cheaper and faster fabrication of the UniPore specimens and improved welding conditions since a lack of a continuous wavy interface was observed in the previous fabrication process. The rolled assembly was subjected to explosive compaction, which resulted in a unidirectional aluminium cellular structure with longitudinal pores as the result of the explosive welding mechanism. The metallographic analysis confirmed a strong bonding between the foil surfaces. The results of the quasi-static and dynamic compressive tests showed stress–strain behaviour, which is typical for cellular metals. No strain-rate sensitivity could be observed in dynamic testing at moderate loading velocities. The fabrication process and the influencing parameters have been further studied by using the computational simulations, revealing that the foil thickness has a dominant influence on the final specimen geometry.


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