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Mechanical properties of Al and Mg alloy welds made by friction stir lap welding

conference contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by S Yazdanian, Z Chen, Guy Littlefair
The unfavourable effect of hooking or softening, respectively, on fracture strength of joints made using friction stir lap welding (FSLW) is known but the combined effect on the magnitude of strength reduction is not clear. In this study, FSLW experiments using AA6060-T5 and AZ31B-H24 alloys were conducted. For both alloys, rotation speed has a dominant effect on increasing the hook size due to increasing the stir flow volume thus lifting more the original lapping surfaces. In AA6060 welds, FS softening has limited the strength, when hook size approaches zero. Meanwhile hook starts to reduce the strength significantly, when its size reaches a critical value. The maximum strength of AA6060 FSL welds reaches ~ 70% of the base metal UTS when hook size approaches zero. This is in contract to ~30% for AZ31B FSL welds. This can be explained by the local plastic deformation behaviour during lap tensile testing.

History

Pagination

243 - 251

Location

San Diego, Calif.

Start date

2011-02-27

End date

2011-03-03

ISBN-13

9781118002018

Language

eng

Publication classification

E2.1 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed

Copyright notice

2011, The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society

Editor/Contributor(s)

R Mishra, M Mahoney, Y Sato, Y Hovanski, R Verma

Title of proceedings

TMS 2011 : Friction Stir Welding and Processing VI

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