Chapter 3 - Principles of Arc Welding
Chapter 3 - Principles of Arc Welding
Chapter 3 - Principles of Arc Welding
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3.1 Electric and welding arc (Cont..)
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3.2 Structure of the welding arc
The welding arc has 3 major zones (see Fig. 3.4)
The cathode
The anode
The column
These are the areas that exercise the greatest
influence on welding arc.
In actual welding, the anode and cathode zones
are occupied by either the electrode or the
workpiece.
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Fig.3.4: Parts of the welding arc and electric
potential drop
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3.2 Structure of the welding arc (Cont..)
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3.2 Structure of the welding arc (Cont..)
The electrons from the cathode zone are
attracted to the anode zone through the
arc column
There are 3 to 4 types of emission in the
cathode zone:
Thermal emission
Field emission
Photo emission
A combination of the above
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3.2 Structure of the welding arc (Cont..
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Table 3.1:
S/No Cathode Zone Anode Zone
1 Voltage drop: Voltage drop:
5...20V 5...15V
2. Positive Charge Negative charge
3. Height: 10-3 cm Height : 5.10-3cm
4. Field strength: Field strength:
104...106 V/cm 103V/cm
5. Diam: 0.1.....1 mm Diam: 0.1.....1 mm
6. Current: 104..106 Current: 102..104
A/cm2 A/cm2 17
Table3.2: Energy Balance
Cathode Anode Zone
Zone
Impact Energy 85% 81%
Entry Energy - 14%
Arc Radiation 7% 1%
Convection 0 0
Combustion 8% 4%
Total heat energy 71% 100%
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3.2 Structure of the welding arc (Cont..
The Arc Column: This column is round and has
2 distinct zones
A violet, bright core with the highest
temperature and ionization – called the
plasma – 50000 to 50,0000 K
An outer jacket of the arc column which is
excited but not ionized
The actual temperature of the arc column
depends on the arc current and the ionization
energy of the plasma gas
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3.3 Metal transfer
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3.3 Metal transfer (Cont..)
Types of metal transfer
Short circuit metal transfer: in this type of
metal transfer, molten globule touches the
molten pool before detaching itself from the
electrode causing a short circuit
The process:
the arc is extinguished on touching
The current density then increases causing
explosive fusion (melting metal bridge) leaving
free space
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3.3 Metal transfer (Cont..)
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3.3 Metal transfer (Cont..)
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3.3 Metal transfer (Cont..)
Direct current:
Is generally preferred in welding because
of its high stability compared to alternating
current
It remains constant in magnitude and
direction
The only limiting factor is the cost is higher
than for ac power sources: cost for
generators, rectifiers/inverters etc 27
3.4 Influence of the type of welding
current
Disadvantages
The blow effects
For multi-arc welding the repulsion and
attraction effects
In both cases the cause are the magnetic effects
that emerge whenever dc flows in a conductor
The interaction of between current flow, magnetic
field, magnetic force results in the movement of
the arc away from the intended direction
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3.4 Influence of the type of welding
current
Arc blow effects can be minimized by:
(a) Change the position of earth wire
(b) Change the position of the w-piece
(c) Wrap the current carrying cable
around the w-piece several times
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3.4 Influence of the type of welding
current
Alternating current
The cheapest source of power for normal
welding shops – welding transformer being
the cheapest
Welding with ac involves electrode and w-
piece alternatingly changing from positive
to negative: the welding arc is
extinguished and re-ignited each time it
goes the zero point
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3.4 Influence of the type of welding
current
Disadvantage
Instability of the welding process –
electrode/workpiece changing polarity
This instability is usually minimized by
heavily ionized atmosphere in the arc gap
and the flux covering electrode
Table 3.4 gives a comparison of the two
types of welding currents
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Table:3.4: Comparison between DC and AC
DC AC
Direct Indirect P
Polarity
Electrode temp Low High medium
Metal transfer Coarse Fine medium