Welding: Dr. Sunil Jha
Welding: Dr. Sunil Jha
Welding: Dr. Sunil Jha
Introduction
Joining
Welding, Brazing, Soldering and Adhesive bonding
In these process a permanent joint between the parts is formed and cannot be separated easily Assembly usually refers to mechanical methods of fastening the parts together. Some of these methods allow easy disassembly, while others do not
Welding
Welding is a material joining process in which two or more parts are coalesced (joined together) at their contacting surfaces by a suitable application of heat and/or pressure. In some welding process a filler material is added to facilitate coalescence. Welding is most commonly associated with metallic parts but for plastics also it is used.
In these processes the materials remain in solid state and welding is achieved through the application of heat and pressure, or high pressure only
Forge Welding
Forge welding is the oldest method of welding in the category of solid state welding. Surfaces to be joined are heated till they are red hot and then forced together by hammering. It is a crude method of welding and quality depends upon the skill of the welder. A modern version of this type of welding is manufacture of butt-welded pipes. In this process, the skulp heated up to the required welding temperature is pulled through die which forces the two edges of the heated skulp to contact under pressure and get welded.
Friction Welding
Explosive Welding
Very high contact pressure developed by detonating a thin layer of explosive. The detonation imparts high kinetic energy to the piece which on striking the other piece causes plastic deformation. No filler material is used and no diffusion takes place.
Arc Welding
In Electric Arc Welding a sustained arc provides the heat required for melting the parent as well as filler material. The workpiece and the electrode are connected to the two materials of the power source. The arc is started by momentarily touching the electrode on to the workpiece and then withdrawing it to a short distance (a few mm) from the workpiece.
Arc Welding
When the electrode and workpiece are in contact, current flows and when they are separated an arc is generated and the current continues to flow. The arc is generated by the electrons liberated form cathode and moving towards anode. The arc changes electrical energy into heat and light.
Arc Welding
About 70% of the heat liberated due to striking of electrons at anode raises the anode temperature to a very values (5,000 to 30,000oC). This heat melts the base metal as well as tip of the electrode in the area surrounding the arc. A weld is formed when the mixture of molten base and electrode metal solidifies in the weld area. Since 70% heat is generated at anode a workpiece connected to anode will melt 50% faster as compared to if connected with cathode. This is why work piece is usually made positive and electrode as negative and is termed as straight polarity.
Seam Welding
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C 2 H 2 + O 2 2 CO + H 2 + Heat
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Flame Types
A neutral flame is obtained when the ratio of is oxygen and acetylene is 1. Most gas welding operations are carried out by this flame. An oxidizing flame is obtained when this ratio is more than 1. This type of flame is not suitable for welding of steels since excess oxygen present reacts with carbon in steel and is generally used for welding of copper and its alloys. When the ratio in mixture is less than 1 a carburizing flame is obtained. In this type of flame acetylene decomposes into carbon and hydrogen and the flame temperature gets reduced. Joining operations such as brazing and soldering which require lower temperature generally use this flame.
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Flame Types
Flame Cutting
Metal is melted by the flame of the oxyfuel gas torch and blown away to form a gap or kerf. When ferrous metal is cut, actually burning of iron takes place according to one or more of the following reactions.
Fe + O Feo + Q 3 Fe + 2 O 2 Fe 3 O 4 + Q 4 Fe + 3 O 2 2 Fe 2 O 3 + Q
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Flame Cutting
Because, these reactions cannot take place below 815C. Oxyfuel flame is first used to raise the metal temperature where burning can be initiated. Then a stream of pure oxygen is added to the torch (or the oxygen content of the oxyfuel mixture is increased) to oxidize the iron. The liquid iron and iron oxides are then expelled from the joint by the kinetic energy of the oxygen gas stream.
Flame Cutting
Low rate of heat input, and need of preheating ahead of the cut, oxyfuel produces a relatively large heat affected zone and thus associated distortion zone. The process is suitable when edge finish or tolerance is not critical. Theoretically heat generated due to burning of Fe is sufficient to continue cutting, however due to losses additional heat supply is needed. If the work is already hot from the other processes, supply of oxygen through a small diameter pipe is needed to continue cut. This is called Oxygen Lance Cutting. A workpiece temperature of 1200C is needed to sustain the cutting.
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Brazing
In brazing the joint is made by heating the base metal red hot and filling the gap with molten metal whose melting temperature is typically above 450C but below melting temperature of base metal. The filler metals are generally copper alloys. Cu-Zn and Cu-Ag alloys are used for brazing because they form alloy with iron and have good strength.
Brazing
Brazing methods Torch and filler rods Ring of filler metal at entrance of gap Foil of filler metal between flat part surfaces
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Brazing Joints
(a) Conventional butt (b) Scarf joint (c) Stepped joint (d) Increased crossection (a) Conventional Lap (b) Cylindrical part (c) Sandwiched part (d) Use of sleeve
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Soldering
Soldering is very similar to brazing except that filler material is usually a lead-tin based alloy which has much lower strength and melting temperature around 250C. In this process less alloying action between base metal and filler material as compared to brazing takes place hence the strength of joint is lesser. It is carried out using electrical resistance heating.
Joints in Soldering
(a) Flat lock seam (b) Bolted or riveted joint (c) Copper pipe fitting (d) Crimping of cylindrical lap joint.
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Joints in Soldering
a) b) c) d)
Crimped lead wire PC board Plated through hole on PC board to maximize solder contact area Hooked wire on flat terminals Twisted wires
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Welding Defects
Cracks
This causes significant reduction in the strength of weldment. Welding cracks are caused by embrittlement or low ductility of the weld and/or base metal combined with high restraint during contraction.
Welding Defects
Cavities
These includes porosity and shrinkage voids.
Solid inclusions
These are metallic or non-metallic solid material particles entrapped in the weld metal. The most common form is slag inclusion or metallic oxides.
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Welding Defects
Incomplete fusion
A similar defect is lack of penetration.
Welding Defects
Imperfect shape
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