EFFECT OF WELDING PROCESS PARAMETERS ON TENSILE STRENGTH AND MICROSTRUCTURE ON STAINLESS STEEL DISSIMILAR JOINTS

Authors

  • Mohanaruban B School of Mechanical Engineering, SRM University, Kattankulathur, 603203, Tamilnadu, India.
  • Rajasekaran T School of Mechanical Engineering, SRM University, Kattankulathur, 603203, Tamilnadu, India.
  • Rajkumar S Centre for Materials Joining and Research (CEMAJOR) ,Department of Manufacturing Engineering, Annamalai University, Annamalai Nagar - 608 002 ,Tamil Nadu, India.
  • Balasubramanian V Centre for Materials Joining and Research (CEMAJOR) ,Department of Manufacturing Engineering, Annamalai University, Annamalai Nagar - 608 002 ,Tamil Nadu, India.

Keywords:

Austenitic stainless steel, Ferritic stainless steel, Gas Tungsten Arc Welding, Gas Metal Arc Welding, Shielded Metal Arc Welding, Microstructure, tensile test

Abstract

Gas Tungsten Arc welding (GTAW) process offers a potential for materials which are hard to weld. It is used to join thin sections of stainless steel and non ferrous metals like Al alloys and it is possible to obtain high quality weld for wide variety of metals and alloys. Gas Tungsten Arc Welding is generally used for fabrication of ferritic stainless steel components because it produces a very high quality weld. The majority of armour fabrication is performed by fusion welding process and they demand for highest welding quality. Shielded metal arc welding (SMAW) and the flux cored arc welding (FCAW) processes are widely used in fabrication of combat vehicle construction. Gas Metal Arc Welding (GMAW) is an effective technology used throughout the industry. It is used widely in advanced construction and equipment, especially in the automotive industry to join the parts. The combination of building materials which commonly uses aluminium and steel has high demand for welding technology. The GMAW welding parameters influence the quality, productivity and cost of welding joint. Austenitic stainless steels have been widely used as nuclear structural materials for reactor coolant piping, valve bodies and vessel internals because of their excellent mechanical properties. Ferritic stainless steels are good resistance to cyclic oxidation and to thermal fatigue, due to their low thermal expansion coefficient compared to austenitic stainless steels. However, these ferritic stainless steels generally have lower strength and lower resistance to isothermal oxidation and creep at high temperature. The current study presents some fundamental observations on the effect of welding processes on tensile, microstructure and corrosion behavior of the fusion zone, formed by AISI 304 (ASS) and AISI 430 (FSS) with AWS E308MoL austenitic stainless steel covered electrode, being a dissimilar welding procedure. Such welding configurations are widely used as an overlay of equipment in the petroleum and gas industries. The welding processes carried out in this experiment are Shielded Metal Arc Welding (SMAW), Gas Tungsten Arc Welding (GTAW), and Gas Metal Arc Welding (GMAW). Samples of the weld metals were conventionally prepared for the microstructural characterization for optical microscope. The tensile properties of the welded material are determined. Based on the results obtained, the optimum welding process for joining ASS and FSS is evaluated.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Van den Bosch J, Coen G, Van Renterghem W and Almazouzi A (2010), “Compatibility of ferritic–martensitic steel T91 welds with liquid lead–bismuth eutectic: Comparison between TIG and EB welds”, Journal of Nuclear Materials, Vol. 396, 57-64.

Niel A, Deschaux F, Bordreuil C, Fras G and Drezet J M (2011), “Hot tearing test for TIG welding of aluminum alloys: application of a stress parallel to the fusion line”, Hot Cracking Phenomena in Welds, Vol. 3, 16-36.

Bala Srinivasan P, Muthupandi V, Dietzel W and Sivan V (2006), “An assessment of impact strength and corrosion behavior of shielded metal arc welded dissimilar weldments between UNS 31803 and IS 2062 steels”, Materials and Design. Vol. 27, 182–191.

Jeong Kil Kim, Seung Gab Hong, Ki Bong Kang and Chung Yun Kang (2009), “Microstructure and High Temperature Properties of the Dissimilar Weld between Ferritic Stainless Steel and Carbon Steel”, Met. Mater. Int., Vol. 15, 843-849.

Villaret V, Deschaux-Beaume F, Bordreuil C, Fras G, Chovet C, Petit B and Faivre L (2013), “Characterization of Gas Metal Arc Welding welds obtained with new high Cr–Mo ferritic stainless steel filler wires”, Materials and Design, Vol. 51, 474– 483.

Mallaiah Gurram, Kumar Adepu, Ravinder Reddy Pinninti and Madhusudhan Reddy Gankidi (2013), “Effect of copper and aluminium addition on mechanical properties and corrosion behavior of AISI 430 ferritic stainless steel gas tungsten arc welds”, Journal of Material Research and Technology, Vol. 2, 238-249.

Cui Y and Carl D Lundin (2007), “Austenite-preferential corrosion attack in 316 austenitic stainless steel weld metals”, Materials and Design, Vol. 28, 324-328.

Cleiton C, Silva A, Helio C, Miranda, Hosiberto B, de Sant’Ana, Jesualdo P and Farias (2013), “Austenitic and ferritic stainless steel dissimilar weld metal evaluation for the applications as- coating in the petroleum processing equipment”, Materials and Design, Vol. 47, 1-8.

Bertil Larsson and Berthold Lundqvist (1986), “Fabrication of Ferritic-Austenitic Stainless Steels”, Materials & Design, Vol. 7, 81-88.

Suresh kumar K, Phanikumar G, Dutta P and Chattopadhyay K (2002), “Microstructural development of dissimilar weldments: case of MIG welding of Cu with Fe filler”, Journal of Materials Science, Vol. 37, 2345-2349.

Cheng-Hsien Kuo, Kuang-Hung Tseng and Chang-Pin Chou (2011), “Effect of activated TIG flux on performance of dissimilar welds between mild steel and stainless steel”, Key Engineering Materials, Vol. 479, 74-80.

Arivazhagan N, Surendra Singh, Sathya Prakash and Reddy G M (2011), “Investigation on AISI 304 austenitic stainless steel to AISI low alloy steel dissimilar joint by gas tungsten arc, electron beam and friction welding”, Materials and Design, Vol. 32, 3036-3050.

Jun Yan, Ming Gao and Xiaoyan Zeng (2010), “Study on microstructure and mechanical properties of 304 stainless steel joints by TIG, laser and laser-TIG hybrid welding”, Optics and Lasers in Engineering, Vol. 48, 512-517.

Behçet Gulenç, Kaya Develi, Nizamettin Kahraman and Ahmet Durgutlu (2005), “Experimental study of the effect of hydrogen in argon as a shielding gas inMIGwelding of austenitic stainless steel”, International Journal of Hydrogen Energy, Vol. 30, 1475-1481.

Konosu S, Mashiba H, Takeshima M, Ohtsuka T (2001), “Effects of pretest aging on creep crack growth properties of type 308 austenitic stainless steel weld metals”, Engineering Failure Analysis, Vol. 8, 75-85.

Magudeeswaran G, Balasubramanian and Madhusudhan Reddy G (2014), “Effect of welding processes and consumables on fatigue crack growth behaviour of armour grade quenched and tempered steel joints”, Defence Technolog, 1-13.

Paulo J Modenesi, Eustaquio R Apolinario, Iaci M Pereira (2000), “TIG welding with single-component fluxes”, Journal of Materials Processing Technology, Vol. 99, 260-265.

Juang S C and Tarng Y S (2002), “Process parameter selection for optimizing the weld pool geometry in the tungsten inert gas welding of stainless steel”, Journal of Materials Processing Technology, Vol. 122, 33-37.

Ahmet Durgutlu (2004), “Experimental investigation of the effect of hydrogen in argon as a shielding gas on TIG welding of austenitic stainless steel”, Materials and Design, Vol. 25, 19-23.

Dongjie Li, Shanping Lu, Wenchao Dong, Dianzhong Li and Yiyi Li (2012), “Study of the law between the weld pool shape variations with the welding parameters under two TIG processes”, Journal of Materials Processing Technology,Vol. 212, 128-136.

Tabatabaeipour S M and Honarvar F (2010), “A comparative evaluation of ultrasonic testing of AISI 316L welds made by shielded metal arc welding and gas tungsten arc welding processes”, Journal of Materials Processing Technology, Vol. 210, 1043–1050.

Abdul wahab H Khuder, Esam J Ebraheam (2011), “Study the Factors Effecting on Welding Joint of Dissimilar Metals”, Al- Khwarizmi Engineering Journal,Vol. 7, 76 – 81.

Hatifi1 M M, Firdaus M H and Razlan A Y (2013), “Modal Analysis of Dissimilar Plate Metal Joining with Different Thickness Using MIG Welding”, International Conference on Mechanical Engineering Research, 169-179.

Izzatul Aini Ibrahim, Syarul Asraf Mohamat, Amalina Amir and Abdul Ghalib (2012), “The Effect of Gas Metal Arc Welding (GMAW) processes on different welding parameters”, Procedia Engineering, Vol. 41, 1502 – 1506.

Vivek Goel, Warren Liao T and Kwan S Lee (1993), “A shielded metal arc welding expert system”, Computers in Industry, Vol. 21, 121-129.

Downloads

Published

2014-09-01

How to Cite

[1]
“EFFECT OF WELDING PROCESS PARAMETERS ON TENSILE STRENGTH AND MICROSTRUCTURE ON STAINLESS STEEL DISSIMILAR JOINTS”, JME, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 175–185, Sep. 2014, Accessed: Dec. 22, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://smenec.org/index.php/1/article/view/270

Similar Articles

41-50 of 346

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

Most read articles by the same author(s)

1 2 3 4 5 > >>