Brazing - Fundamentals - 1
Brazing - Fundamentals - 1
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Joint Design
What type of brazed joint should you design? There are many kinds of joints. But our
problem is simplified by the fact that there are only two basic types - the butt and the lap.
The rest are essentially modifications of these two. Let's look first at the butt joint, both for
flat and tubular parts.
As you can see, the butt joint gives you the advantage of a single thickness at the joint.
Preparation of this type of joint is usually simple, and the joint will have sufficient tensile
strength for a good many applications. However, the strength of the butt joint does have
limitations. It depends, in part, on the amount of bonding surface, and in a butt joint the
bonding area can't be any larger than the cross-section of the thinner member.
Now let's compare this with the lap joint, both for flat and tubular parts.
The first thing you'll notice is that, for a given thickness of base metals, the bonding area of
the lap joint can be larger than that of the butt joint and usually is. With larger bonding
areas, lap joints can usually carry larger loads.
The lap joint gives you a double thickness at the joint, but in many applications (plumbing
connections, for example) the double thickness is not objectionable. And the lap joint is
generally self-supporting during the brazing process. Resting one flat member on the other
is usually enough to maintain a uniform joint clearance. And, in tubular joints, nesting one
tube inside the other holds them in proper alignment for brazing. However, suppose you
want a joint that has the advantages of both types; single thickness at the joint combined
with maximum tensile strength. You can get this combination by designing the joint as a
butt-lap joint.
True, the butt-lap is usually a little more work to prepare than straight butt or lap, but the
extra work can pay off. You wind up with a single thickness joint of maximum strength. And
the joint is usually self-supporting when assembled for brazing.
Figuring the proper length of lap
Obviously, you don't have to calculate the bonding area of a butt joint. It will be the crosssection of the thinner member and that's that. But lap joints are often variable. Their length
can be increased or decreased. How long should a lap joint be? The rule of thumb is to
design the lap joint to be three times as long as the thickness of the thinner joint member.
A longer lap may waste brazing filler metal and use more base metal material than is really
needed, without a corresponding increase in joint strength. And a shorter lap will lower the
strength of the joint. For most applications, you're on safe ground with the "rule of three."
More specifically, if you know the approximate tensile strengths of the base members, the
lap length required for optimum joint strength in a silver brazed joint is as follows:
Tensile strength of weakest member
2xW
3xW
5xW
6xW
8xW
If you have a great many identical assemblies to braze, or if the joint strength is critical, it
will help to figure the length of lap more exactly, to gain maximum strength with minimum
use of brazing materials. The formulas given below will help you calculate the optimum lap
length for flat and for tubular joints.
X = Length of lap
T = Tensile strength of weakest member
W = Thickness of weakest member
C = Joint integrity factor of .8
L = Shear strength of brazed filler metal
Let's see how this formula works, using an example.
Problem: What length of lap do you need to join .050" annealed Monel sheet to a metal of
equal or greater strength?
Solution:
C = .8
T = 70,000 psi (annealed Monel sheet)
W = .050"
L = 25,000 psi (Typical shear strength for silver brazing filler metals)
X = (70,000 x .050) /(.8 x 25,000) = .18" lap length
Problem in metric: What length of lap do you need to join 1.27 mm annealed Monel sheet
to a metal of equal or greater strength?
Solution:
C = .8
T = 482.63 MPa (annealed Monel sheet)
W = 1.27 mm
L = 172.37 MPa (Typical shear strength for silver brazing filler metals)
clearance, to keep the layer of filler metal as thin as possible. In addition, if strength is not a
prime consideration, you can reduce length of lap. Instead of the customary "rule of three,"
you can reduce lap length to about 1-1/2 times the cross-section of the thinner member. If
the brazed assembly has to be pressure-tight against gas or liquid, a lap joint is almost a
must, since it withstands greater pressure than a butt joint. And its broader bonding area
reduces any chance of leakage. Another consideration in designing a joint to be leak proof is
to vent the assembly. Providing a vent during the brazing process allows expanding air or
gases to escape as the molten filler metal flows into the joint. Venting the assembly also
prevents entrapment of flux in the joint. Avoiding entrapped gases or flux reduce the
potential for leak paths. If possible, the assembly should be self-venting. Since flux is
designed to be displaced by molten filler metal entering a joint, there should be no sharp
corners or blind holes to cause flux entrapment. The joint should be designed so that the
flux is pushed completely out of the joint by the filler metal. Where this is not possible, small
holes may be drilled into the blind spots to allow flux escape. The joint is completed when
molten filler metal appears at the outside surface of these drilled holes.
To maximize corrosion-resistance of a joint, select a brazing filler metal containing such
elements as silver, gold or palladium, which are inherently corrosion-resistant. Keep joint
clearances close and use a minimum amount of filler metal, so that the finished joint will
expose only a fine line of brazing filler metal to the atmosphere. These are but a few
examples of service requirements that may be demanded of your brazed assembly. As you
can see both the joint design and filler metal selection must be considered. Fortunately,
there are many filler metals and fluxes available to you - in a wide range of compositions,
properties and melting temperatures. The selector charts that appear later in this book can
help you choose filler metals and fluxes that best meet the service requirements of the joints
you design. The Technical Services Department at Handy & Harman/Lucas-Milhaupt is
available to help answer any questions you may have with regard to your specific brazing
application, joint design and/or filler metal selection.