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Wednesday, June 4, 2008 - 10:25 AM

Deconvoluting the friction stir weld process for optimizing welds

J. Schneider, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS; A. C. Nunes, NASA-MSFC, Marshall Space Flight Center, AL

In the friction stir welding process, the rotating surfaces of the pin and shoulder contact the weld metal and force a rotational flow within the weld metal.  Heat, generated by the metal deformation as well as frictional slippage with the contact surface, softens the metal and makes it easier to deform.  As in any thermo-mechanical processing of metal, the flow conditions are critical to the quality of the weld. The trace of the weld joint in the wake of the weld may vary geometrically depending upon the flow streamlines around the tool with some geometry more vulnerable to loss of strength from joint contamination than others. 

 

The material flow path around the tool cannot be seen in real time during the weld.  By using analytical “tools” based upon the principles of mathematics and physics, a weld model can be created to compute features that can be observed. By comparing the computed observations with actual data, the weld model can be validated or adjusted to get better agreement.  Inputs to the model to predict weld structures and properties include:  hot working properties of the metal, pin tool geometry, travel rate, rotation and plunge force. 

 

Since metals record their prior hot working history, the hot working conditions imparted during FSW can be quantified by interpreting the final microstructure.  Variations in texture and grain size result from variations in the strain accommodated at a given strain rate and temperature.  Microstructural data from a variety of FSWs has been correlated with prior marker studies to contribute to our understanding of the FSW process.  Once this stage is reached, the weld modeling process can save significant development costs by reducing costly trial-and-error approaches to obtaining quality welds. 


Summary: In the friction stir welding process a rotational flow is forced within the weld zone. As in any thermo-mechanical processing, the flow conditions are critical to the quality of the weld. Microstructural data from various welds has been correlated with prior marker studies to contribute to our understanding of the metal flow.