Cargando…

Comparative Study of FSW, MIG, and TIG Welding of AA5083-H111 Based on the Evaluation of Welded Joints and Economic Aspect

Selecting an economically suitable welding technique and optimizing welding parameters to obtain high joint quality is considered a challenge for expanding the 5xxx aluminum alloy series in various industrial applications. This work aims to investigate the effect of applying different welding techni...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Habba, Mohamed I. A., Alsaleh, Naser A., Badran, Takwa E., El-Sayed Seleman, Mohamed M., Ataya, Sabbah, El-Nikhaily, Ahmed E., Abdul-Latif, Akrum, Ahmed, Mohamed M. Z.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10385343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37512398
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16145124
_version_ 1785081382967443456
author Habba, Mohamed I. A.
Alsaleh, Naser A.
Badran, Takwa E.
El-Sayed Seleman, Mohamed M.
Ataya, Sabbah
El-Nikhaily, Ahmed E.
Abdul-Latif, Akrum
Ahmed, Mohamed M. Z.
author_facet Habba, Mohamed I. A.
Alsaleh, Naser A.
Badran, Takwa E.
El-Sayed Seleman, Mohamed M.
Ataya, Sabbah
El-Nikhaily, Ahmed E.
Abdul-Latif, Akrum
Ahmed, Mohamed M. Z.
author_sort Habba, Mohamed I. A.
collection PubMed
description Selecting an economically suitable welding technique and optimizing welding parameters to obtain high joint quality is considered a challenge for expanding the 5xxx aluminum alloy series in various industrial applications. This work aims to investigate the effect of applying different welding techniques, tungsten inert gas (TIG) and metal inert gas (MIG), as fusion welding processes compared to friction stir welding (FSW), a solid-state joining process, on the joint performance of the produced 5 mm thick similar AA5083-H111 butt weldments at different welding conditions. Different methods were used to evaluate the quality of the produced joints, including visual inspection, radiographic testing (RT), and macrostructure evaluation, in addition to hardness and tensile tests. The fracture surface of the tensile-failed specimens was also investigated using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). Furthermore, the current study ended with an economic analysis of the welding techniques used. The results showed that, for the friction stir-welded joints, the radiographic films revealed defect-free joints at the two applied travel speeds of 100 mm/min and 400 mm/min and a constant tool rotating speed of 400 rpm. In addition, only one joint was welded by MIG at a welding current of 130 Amp, with a 19 L/min flow rate of pure argon. In contrast, the radiographic films showed internal defects such as lack of fusion (LOF), lack of penetration (LOP), and porosity (P) for the two joints welded by TIG and one joint welded by MIG. The hardness of the welded joints was enhanced over the AA5083-H111 base material (BM) by 24–29, 31–35, and 46–50% for the MIG, TIG, and FSW joints, respectively. The maximum ultimate tensile strength was obtained for the FSW joint welded at a 400 mm/min travel speed. Adopting FSW in shipbuilding applications can further produce the AA5083-H11 joints with higher quality and efficiency than fusion welding techniques such as MIG and TIG processes. In addition, time and cost comparisons between TIG, MIG, and FSW were performed for five-millimeter-thick and one-meter-long AA5083-H111.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10385343
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103853432023-07-30 Comparative Study of FSW, MIG, and TIG Welding of AA5083-H111 Based on the Evaluation of Welded Joints and Economic Aspect Habba, Mohamed I. A. Alsaleh, Naser A. Badran, Takwa E. El-Sayed Seleman, Mohamed M. Ataya, Sabbah El-Nikhaily, Ahmed E. Abdul-Latif, Akrum Ahmed, Mohamed M. Z. Materials (Basel) Article Selecting an economically suitable welding technique and optimizing welding parameters to obtain high joint quality is considered a challenge for expanding the 5xxx aluminum alloy series in various industrial applications. This work aims to investigate the effect of applying different welding techniques, tungsten inert gas (TIG) and metal inert gas (MIG), as fusion welding processes compared to friction stir welding (FSW), a solid-state joining process, on the joint performance of the produced 5 mm thick similar AA5083-H111 butt weldments at different welding conditions. Different methods were used to evaluate the quality of the produced joints, including visual inspection, radiographic testing (RT), and macrostructure evaluation, in addition to hardness and tensile tests. The fracture surface of the tensile-failed specimens was also investigated using a scanning electron microscope (SEM). Furthermore, the current study ended with an economic analysis of the welding techniques used. The results showed that, for the friction stir-welded joints, the radiographic films revealed defect-free joints at the two applied travel speeds of 100 mm/min and 400 mm/min and a constant tool rotating speed of 400 rpm. In addition, only one joint was welded by MIG at a welding current of 130 Amp, with a 19 L/min flow rate of pure argon. In contrast, the radiographic films showed internal defects such as lack of fusion (LOF), lack of penetration (LOP), and porosity (P) for the two joints welded by TIG and one joint welded by MIG. The hardness of the welded joints was enhanced over the AA5083-H111 base material (BM) by 24–29, 31–35, and 46–50% for the MIG, TIG, and FSW joints, respectively. The maximum ultimate tensile strength was obtained for the FSW joint welded at a 400 mm/min travel speed. Adopting FSW in shipbuilding applications can further produce the AA5083-H11 joints with higher quality and efficiency than fusion welding techniques such as MIG and TIG processes. In addition, time and cost comparisons between TIG, MIG, and FSW were performed for five-millimeter-thick and one-meter-long AA5083-H111. MDPI 2023-07-20 /pmc/articles/PMC10385343/ /pubmed/37512398 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16145124 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Habba, Mohamed I. A.
Alsaleh, Naser A.
Badran, Takwa E.
El-Sayed Seleman, Mohamed M.
Ataya, Sabbah
El-Nikhaily, Ahmed E.
Abdul-Latif, Akrum
Ahmed, Mohamed M. Z.
Comparative Study of FSW, MIG, and TIG Welding of AA5083-H111 Based on the Evaluation of Welded Joints and Economic Aspect
title Comparative Study of FSW, MIG, and TIG Welding of AA5083-H111 Based on the Evaluation of Welded Joints and Economic Aspect
title_full Comparative Study of FSW, MIG, and TIG Welding of AA5083-H111 Based on the Evaluation of Welded Joints and Economic Aspect
title_fullStr Comparative Study of FSW, MIG, and TIG Welding of AA5083-H111 Based on the Evaluation of Welded Joints and Economic Aspect
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Study of FSW, MIG, and TIG Welding of AA5083-H111 Based on the Evaluation of Welded Joints and Economic Aspect
title_short Comparative Study of FSW, MIG, and TIG Welding of AA5083-H111 Based on the Evaluation of Welded Joints and Economic Aspect
title_sort comparative study of fsw, mig, and tig welding of aa5083-h111 based on the evaluation of welded joints and economic aspect
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10385343/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37512398
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16145124
work_keys_str_mv AT habbamohamedia comparativestudyoffswmigandtigweldingofaa5083h111basedontheevaluationofweldedjointsandeconomicaspect
AT alsalehnasera comparativestudyoffswmigandtigweldingofaa5083h111basedontheevaluationofweldedjointsandeconomicaspect
AT badrantakwae comparativestudyoffswmigandtigweldingofaa5083h111basedontheevaluationofweldedjointsandeconomicaspect
AT elsayedselemanmohamedm comparativestudyoffswmigandtigweldingofaa5083h111basedontheevaluationofweldedjointsandeconomicaspect
AT atayasabbah comparativestudyoffswmigandtigweldingofaa5083h111basedontheevaluationofweldedjointsandeconomicaspect
AT elnikhailyahmede comparativestudyoffswmigandtigweldingofaa5083h111basedontheevaluationofweldedjointsandeconomicaspect
AT abdullatifakrum comparativestudyoffswmigandtigweldingofaa5083h111basedontheevaluationofweldedjointsandeconomicaspect
AT ahmedmohamedmz comparativestudyoffswmigandtigweldingofaa5083h111basedontheevaluationofweldedjointsandeconomicaspect