EFFECT OF HARDFACED TOOLS ON THE PERFORMANCE OF FRICTION STIR WELDED COPPER ALLOYS JOINTS

Authors

  • Baskaran A Department of Manufacturing Engineering, Annamalai University, Annamalainagar- 608002, Tamil Nadu
  • Shanmugam K Department of Manufacturing Engineering, Annamalai University, Annamalainagar- 608002, Tamil Nadu
  • Balasubramanian V Department of Manufacturing Engineering, Annamalai University, Annamalainagar- 608002, Tamil Nadu

Keywords:

Plasma transferred arc welding, Shielded metal arc welding, Friction Stir Welding, Mild steel, Tensile properties , Microstructure

Abstract

In the present work, an attempt was made to develop high temperature wear resistant hardfaced tools for friction stir welding (FSW) of commercial grade copper alloys. Hardfacing was applied on mild steel rod using Tungsten carbide forming powder by plasma transferred arc (PTA) hardfacing process and Tungsten carbide forming consumables by Shielded metal arc hardfacing (SMA) process. Commercially available tool material high speed steel (HSS) was also used to friction stir weld copper alloy for comparison purpose. From this investigation, it is found that the PTA hardfaced tool yielded defect free joints without tool wear compared to other tools. The optimum level of heat generation, formation of finer grains and higher hardness of stir zone are main reasons for the superior tensile properties of the joints fabricated by PTA hardfaced tungsten carbide tools.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Hwang Y M Fan P L Lin C H (2010), “Experimental study on friction stir welding of copper metals”, Mateialprocessingtechnology, vol.527, 5723–5727.

Steuwer A Barnes S J Altenkirch J Johnson R Withers P J (2011), “Friction stir welding of HSLA-65 steel part ii - The influence of weld speed and tool material on the residual stress distribution and tool wear the minerals”, Metals & Materials Society and ASM International.

Olivier Lorraina VéroniqueFavierb Hamid Zahrounic Didier Lawrjaniecd (2010), “Understanding the material flow path of friction stir welding process using unthreaded tools”, Journal of Material Processing Technology, vol. 210, 603–609.

Sun Y F Fujii H (2011), “The effect of SiC particles on the microstructure and mechanical properties of friction stir welded pure copper joints”, Material Science and Engineering, vol.528, 5470–5475.

Carter Hamiltona StanisławDymekb MarekBlicharskib, (2008), “ A model of material flow during friction stir welding”, Material characterization, vol. 59, 1206 – 1214.

Cavalierea P Nobilea R Panellaa F Squillaceb W (2006), “Mechanical and microstructural behaviour of 2024–7075 aluminiumalloy sheets joined by friction stir welding”, International Journal of Machine Tools & Manufacture, vol.46, 588–594.

Packer S Nelson T Sorensen C D Steel R Matsunaga M (2004), “Tool and equipment requirements for friction stir welding ferrous and other high melting temperature alloys”, In: 4th Intl FSW symp.

Ouyang J H Mei H Valant M Kovacevic R (2002), “Application of laser-based additive manufacturing to production of tools for friction stir welding”, vo.l5, 65-72.

Balasubramanian V Varahamoorthy R Ramachandran C S Muralidharan C (2009), “Selection of welding process for hardfacing on carbon steels based on quantitative and qualitative factors”, International Journal of Advanced Manufacturing Technology, vol.40, 887–897.

Srimath N Murugan N (2011), “Prediction and Optimisation of Weld Bead Geometry of Plasma Transferred Arc Hardfaced Valve Seat Rings”, European Journal of Science and Research, vol. 51, no.2, 285-298.

VivekGoel Warren Liao T Kwan Lee S (1993), “A shielded metal arc welding expert system Computers in Industry Elsevier Knowledge Engineering”, vol.21, 121-129.

Eitvydasgruzdys Šarūnasmeškinis (2011), “Influence of Plasma Transferred Arc Process Parameters on Structure and Mechanical Properties of Wear Resistive NiCrBSi-WC/Co Coatings”, Materials Science, vol.17, no.2, 1392–1320.

ASTM E8 M-04. “Standard test method for tension testing of metallic materials”.

Heurtier P (2006), “Mechanical and Thermal Modeling of FSW”, Journal of Material .Processing and Technology, vol. 171, 348–357.

Downloads

Published

2015-12-01

How to Cite

[1]
“EFFECT OF HARDFACED TOOLS ON THE PERFORMANCE OF FRICTION STIR WELDED COPPER ALLOYS JOINTS”, JME, vol. 10, no. 4, pp. 171–178, Dec. 2015, Accessed: Nov. 21, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://smenec.org/index.php/1/article/view/219

Similar Articles

11-20 of 376

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 > >>