Title of article
Local melting and tool slippage during friction stir spot welding of Al-alloys
Author/Authors
Adrian Gerlich، نويسنده , , Motomichi Yamamoto، نويسنده , , Thomas H. North، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
10
From page
2
To page
11
Abstract
Local melting and tool slippage during friction
stir spot welding of different Al-alloy base materials is
examined using a combination of detailed microscopy and
temperature measurement. The stir zone peak temperature
during welding is limited by either the solidus of the alloy in
question or by spontaneous melting of intermetallic particles
contained in the as-received base material. When
spontaneous melting occurs this facilitates tool slippage at
the contact interface. Accurate stir zone temperature and
grain size measurements are essential elements when estimating
the strain rate using the Zener–Hollomon relation. In
Al 2024 and Al 7075 spot welds spontaneous melting of
second-phase particles produces a drastic reduction in strain
rate values. In Al 5754 and Al 6061 spot welds there is a
strong correlation between tool rotational speed and estimated
strain values. Local melted films dissolve rapidly in
the high temperature stir zone and when the spot weld cools
to room temperature following welding. Evidence of local
melting is observed in Al 7075 friction stir spot welded
joints made using a combination of rapid quenching, high
plunge rates, and extremely short dwell time settings
Journal title
Journal of Materials Science
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Journal of Materials Science
Record number
833821
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