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Thermo-Mechanical Processing in Friction Stir Welds

TLDR
In this article, the authors developed a basic understanding of the evolution of the microstructure to be able to relate it to the deformation process variables of strain, strain rate, and temperature.
Abstract
Friction stir welding is a solid-phase joining, or welding process that was invented in 1991 at The Welding Institute (TWI). The process is potentially capable of joining a wide variety of aluminum alloys that are traditionally difficult to fusion weld. The friction stir welding (FSW) process produces welds by moving a non-consumable rotating pin tool along a seam between work pieces that are firmly clamped to an anvil. At the start of the process, the rotating pin is plunged into the material to a pre-determined load. The required heat is produced by a combination of frictional and deformation heating. The shape of the tool shoulder and supporting anvil promotes a high hydrostatic pressure along the joint line as the tool shears and literally stirs the metal together. To produce a defect free weld, process variables (RPM, transverse speed, and downward force) and tool pin design must be chosen carefully. An accurate model of the material flow during the process is necessary to guide process variable selection. At MSFC a plastic slip line model of the process has been synthesized based on macroscopic images of the resulting weld material. Although this model appears to have captured the main features of the process, material specific interactions are not understood. The objective of the present research was to develop a basic understanding of the evolution of the microstructure to be able to relate it to the deformation process variables of strain, strain rate, and temperature.

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Citations
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Characterization of tool wear and weld optimization in the friction-stir welding of cast aluminum 359+20% SiC metal-matrix composite

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the weld zone becomes more homogeneous for efficient welding with self-optimized tools, and there is a reduction in the welding zone grain size due to dynamic recrystallization, which facilitates the solidstate flow.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of pin geometry on material flow in friction stir welding process

TL;DR: In this article, the material flow in friction stir welded 2014 Al alloy has been investigated using a marker insert technique (MIT) using a 3D flow visualization similar to the 3D image reconstruction technique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Joining of Cast ZE41A Mg to Wrought 6061 Al by the Cold Spray Process and Friction Stir Welding

TL;DR: In this article, cold spray is used to join cast ZE41A-T5 Mg to wrought 6061-T6 Al, without forming deleterious, coarse intermetallic compounds, which is not currently possible with conventional technologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of tool geometry in dissimilar Al alloy friction stir welds using optical microscopy and serial sectioning

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of tool geometry on material flow during friction stir welding of dissimilar aluminium alloys is investigated, and it is shown that three flat features on the pin impose vertical material flow which can promote intermixing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature Monitoring and Material Flow Characteristics of Friction Stir Welded 2A14-t6 Aerospace Aluminum Alloy.

TL;DR: Temperature monitoring methods and the flow model of material can be used to optimize the welding parameters and show that the temperature in the welding zone is the highest at 1300 rpm, and the temperature at the tool shoulder is significantly higher than that at thetool pin in the Welding stage.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Flow visualization and residual microstructures associated with the friction-stir welding of 2024 aluminum to 6061 aluminum

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors visualized the dynamics of superplastic flow in friction-stir welding of 0.6 cm plates of 2024 Al (140 HV) to 6061 Al (100 HV).

Wiping Metal Transfer in Friction Stir Welding

TL;DR: In this paper, it was shown that as the friction stir pin-tool moves along a weld seam the displacement of metal takes place by a wiping action at the surface of a plug of metal that rotates with the tool.
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