Fundamentals of Welding Chapter 30
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FUNDAMENTALS OF WELDING
1. Overview of Welding Technology
2. The Weld Joint
3. Physics of Welding
4. Features of a Fusion Welded Joint
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Joining and Assembly
Distinguished
Joining - welding, brazing, soldering, and adhesive
bonding
These processes form a permanent joint between parts
Assembly - mechanical methods (usually) of fastening
parts together
Some of these methods allow for easy disassembly,
while others do not
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Welding
Joining process in which two (or more) parts are
coalesced at their contacting surfaces by application of
heat and/or pressure
Many welding processes are accomplished by heat
alone, with no pressure applied
Others by a combination of heat and pressure
Still others by pressure alone with no external heat
In some welding processes a filler material is added to
facilitate coalescence
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Why Welding is Important
Provides a permanent joint
Welded components become a single entity
Usually the most economical way to join parts in terms
of material usage and fabrication costs
Mechanical fastening usually requires additional
hardware components (e.g., screws and nuts) and
geometric alterations of the parts being assembled (e.g.,
holes)
Not restricted to a factory environment
Welding can be accomplished "in the field"
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Limitations and Drawbacks of
Welding
Most welding operations are performed manually and
are expensive in terms of labor cost
Most welding processes utilize high energy and are
inherently dangerous
Welded joints do not allow for convenient disassembly
Welded joints can have quality defects that are
difficult to detect
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Faying Surfaces in Welding
The part surfaces in contact or close proximity that are
being joined
Welding involves localized coalescence of the two
metallic parts at their faying surfaces
Welding is usually performed on parts made of the
same metal
However, some welding operations can be used to join
dissimilar metals
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Types of Welding Processes
Some 50 different types of welding processes have
been catalogued by the American Welding Society
(AWS)
Welding processes can be divided into two major
categories:
Fusion welding
Solid state welding
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Fusion Welding
Joining processes that melt the base metals
In many fusion welding operations, a filler metal is
added to the molten pool to facilitate the process and
provide bulk and added strength to the welded joint
A fusion welding operation in which no filler metal is
added is called an autogenous weld
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Some Fusion Welding Processes
Arc welding (AW) – melting of the metals is
accomplished by electric arc
Resistance welding (RW) ‑ melting is accomplished by
heat from resistance to an electrical current between
faying surfaces held together under pressure
Oxyfuel gas welding (OFW) ‑ melting is accomplished
by an oxyfuel gas such as acetylene
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Arc Welding
A manual arc welding
operation
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Solid State Welding
Joining processes in which coalescence results from
application of pressure alone or a combination of heat
and pressure
If heat is used, temperature is below melting point of
metals being welded
No filler metal is added in solid state welding
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Some Solid State Welding
Processes
Diffusion welding (DFW) –coalescence is by solid
state fusion between two surfaces held together under
pressure at elevated temperature
Friction welding (FRW) ‑ coalescence by heat of
friction between two surfaces
Ultrasonic welding (USW) ‑ coalescence by ultrasonic
oscillating motion in a direction parallel to contacting
surfaces of two parts held together under pressure
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Principal Applications of
Welding
Construction - buildings and bridges
Piping, pressure vessels, boilers, and storage tanks
Shipbuilding
Aircraft and aerospace
Automotive
Railroad
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Welder and Fitter
Welder - manually controls path or placement of
welding gun
Often assisted by second worker, called a fitter, who
arranges the parts prior to welding
Welding fixtures and positioners are used to assist in
this function
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The Safety Issue
Welding is inherently dangerous to human workers
High temperatures of molten metals
In gas welding, fuels (e.g., acetylene) are a fire hazard
Many welding processes use electrical power, so
electrical shock is a hazard
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Special Hazards in Arc Welding
Ultraviolet radiation emitted in arc welding is
injurious to human vision
Welder must wear a special helmet with a dark viewing
window
Filters out dangerous radiation but welder is blind
except when arc is struck
Sparks, spatters of molten metal, smoke, and fumes
add to the risks
Ventilation needed to exhaust dangerous fumes from
fluxes and molten metals
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Automation in Welding
Because of the hazards of manual welding, and to
increase productivity and improve quality, various
forms of mechanization and automation are used
Machine welding – mechanized welding under
supervision and control of human operator
Automatic welding – equipment performs welding
without operator control
Robotic welding - automatic welding implemented by
industrial robot
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The Weld Joint
The junction of the edges or surfaces of parts that have
been joined by welding
Two issues about weld joints:
Types of joints
Types of welds used to join the pieces that form the
joints
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Five Types of Joints
1. Butt joint
2. Corner joint
3. Lap joint
4. Tee joint
5. Edge joint
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Butt Joint
Parts lie in same plane and are joined at
their edges
Figure 30.2 Five basic
types of joints: (a) butt
Corner Joint
Parts in a corner
joint form a right
angle and are joined
at the corner of the
angle
Figure 30.2 (b) corner
Lap Joint
Consists of two
overlapping parts
Figure 30.2 (c) lap
Tee Joint
One part is
perpendicular to the
other in the
approximate shape of
the letter "T"
Figure 30.2 (d) tee
Edge Joint
Parts in an edge
joint are parallel
with at least one of
their edges in
common, and the
joint is made at the
common edge(s)
Figure 30.2 (e) edge
Types of Welds
Each of the preceding joints can be made by welding
Other joining processes can also be used for some of
the joint types
There is a difference between joint type and the way it
is welded ‑ the weld type
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Fillet Weld
Used to fill in the edges of plates created by corner,
lap, and tee joints
Filler metal used to provide cross section in
approximate shape of a right triangle
Most common weld type in arc and oxyfuel welding
Requires minimum edge preparation
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Fillet Welds
Figure 30.3 Various forms of fillet welds: (a) inside single
fillet corner joint; (b) outside single fillet corner joint; (c)
double fillet lap joint; and (d) double fillet tee joint.
Dashed lines show the original part edges.
Groove Welds
Usually requires part edges to be shaped into a groove
to facilitate weld penetration
Edge preparation increases cost of parts fabrication
Grooved shapes include square, bevel, V, U, and J, in
single or double sides
Most closely associated with butt joints
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Groove Welds
Figure 30.4 Some groove welds: (a) square groove weld, one
side; (b) single bevel groove weld; (c) single V‑groove weld; (d)
single U‑groove weld; (e) single J‑groove weld; (f) double
V‑groove weld for thicker sections. Dashed lines show original
part edges.
Spot Weld
Fused section between surfaces of two plates
Used for lap joints
Closely associated with resistance welding
Figure
30.6 (a)
Spot
weld
Physics of Welding
Fusion is most common means of achieving
coalescence in welding
To accomplish fusion, a source of high density heat
energy must be supplied to the faying surfaces, so the
resulting temperatures cause localized melting of base
metals (and filler metal, if used)
For metallurgical reasons, it is desirable to melt the
metal with minimum energy but high heat densities
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Power Density
Power transferred to work per unit surface area, W/mm2
(Btu/sec‑in2)
If power density is too low, heat is conducted into
work, so melting never occurs
If power density too high, localized temperatures
vaporize metal in affected region
There is a practical range of values for heat density
within which welding can be performed
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Comparisons Among Welding
Processes
Oxyfuel gas welding (OFW) develops large amounts of
heat, but heat density is relatively low because heat is
spread over a large area
Oxyacetylene gas, the hottest of the OFW fuels, burns at
a top temperature of around 3500C (6300F)
Arc welding produces high energy over a smaller area,
resulting in local temperatures of 5500 to 6600C
(10,000 to 12,000F)
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Power Densities for Welding
Processes
Welding process W/mm2 (Btu/sec-in2)
Oxyfuel 10 (6)
Arc 50 (30)
Resistance 1,000 (600)
Laser beam 9,000 (5,000)
Electron beam 10,000 (6,000)
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Power Density
Power entering surface divided by corresponding surface
area:
P
PD
A
where PD = power density, W/mm2 (Btu/sec‑in2); P =
power entering surface, W (Btu/sec); and A = surface
area over which energy is entering, mm2 (in2)
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Unit Energy for Melting
Quantity of heat required to melt a unit
volume of metal
Symbolized Um
It is the sum of:
Heat to raise temperature of solid metal to
melting point
Depends on volumetric specific heat
Heat to transform metal from solid to
liquid phase at melting point
Depends on heat of fusion
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Heat Transfer Mechanisms in
Welding
Not all of the input energy is used to melt the weld
metal
1. Heat transfer efficiency f1 - actual heat received by
workpiece divided by total heat generated at source
2. Melting efficiency f2 - proportion of heat received at
work surface used for melting; the rest is conducted
into work metal
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Heat Available for Welding
Hw = f1 f2 H
where Hw = net heat available for welding; f1 =
heat transfer efficiency; f2 = melting
efficiency; and H = total heat generated by
welding process
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Heat Transfer Efficiency f1
Proportion of heat received at work surface relative to
total heat generated at source
Depends on welding process and capacity to convert
power source (e.g., electrical energy) into usable heat
at work surface
Oxyfuel gas welding processes are relatively inefficient
Arc welding processes are relatively efficient
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Melting Efficiency f2
Proportion of heat received at work surface used for
melting; the rest is conducted into the work
Depends on welding process but also influenced by
thermal properties of metal, joint configuration, and
work thickness
Metals with high thermal conductivity, such as
aluminum and copper, present a problem in welding
because of the rapid dissipation of heat away from the
heat contact area
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Energy Balance Equation
Net heat energy into welding operation equals heat
energy required to melt the volume of metal welded
Hw = Um V
where Hw = net heat energy delivered to operation, J
(Btu); Um = unit energy required to melt the metal,
J/mm3 (Btu/in3); and V = volume of metal melted,
mm3 (in3)
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Typical Fusion Welded Joint
Figure 30.8 Cross section of a typical fusion welded
joint: (a) principal zones in the joint, and (b) typical
grain structure.
Features of Fusion Welded Joint
Typical fusion weld joint in which filler metal has been
added consists of:
Fusion zone
Weld interface
Heat affected zone (HAZ)
Unaffected base metal zone
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Heat Affected Zone
Metal has experienced temperatures below melting
point, but high enough to cause microstructural
changes in the solid metal
Chemical composition same as base metal, but this
region has been heat treated so that its properties and
structure have been altered
Effect on mechanical properties in HAZ is usually
negative, and it is here that welding failures often occur
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