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Controlling Interfacial Reaction during Dissimilar Metal Welding of Aluminium Alloys

Li Wang, Yin Wang, Chao Qun Zhang, Lei Xu, Joseph Robson, Philip Prangnell

Materials Science Forum. 2014;794:416-421.

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Abstract

A critical issue when joining aluminium alloys to dissimilar metals such as magnesium, titanium, and steel is to control the formation of brittle intermetallic compounds (IMCs) that occur due to the reaction at the joint interface. It is demonstrated that once the IMC exceeds a critical thickness, failure of welds always occurs in a brittle manner, with cracks propagating through the IMC. One approach to minimize IMC thickness is to use a solid state joining process, such as friction stir or ultrasonic welding. However, even using these processes, an IMC that exceeds the critical thickness can either form during welding or post-weld heat treatment. In this paper, a number of approaches are discussed to control IMC formation in welds between aluminium alloys and magnesium alloy. Modelling predictions indicate that interfacial reaction rates and grain size of the IMC phases are two critical factors to control layer growth. Experimental results demonstrate that the grain size of IMC layers changes as the layers grow. These modelling predictions and experimental results offer new design strategies to optimize dissimilar metal welding involving aluminium.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication status:
Accepted
Publication type:
Published date:
Journal title:
ISSN:
Volume:
794
Start page:
416
End page:
421
Total:
5
Pagination:
416-421
Digital Object Identifier:
10.4028/www.scientific.net/MSF.794-796.416
Funding awarded to University:
  • EPSRC - RESEPSRC
Research data access statement included:
Not applicable
Attached files embargo period:
Immediate release
Attached files release date:
6th January, 2016
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:294402
Created by:
Prangnell, Philip
Created:
6th January, 2016, 15:21:08
Last modified by:
Prangnell, Philip
Last modified:
6th January, 2016, 16:11:01

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