Impact of travel speed on the microstructure and mechanical properties of adjustable-gap bobbin-tool friction stir welded Al-Mg joints

Dong Wu , Wen-ya Li , Yan-jun Gao , Jun Yang , Quan Wen , Nektarios Vidakis , Achillefs Vairis

International Journal of Minerals, Metallurgy, and Materials ›› 2021, Vol. 28 ›› Issue (4) : 710 -717.

PDF
International Journal of Minerals, Metallurgy, and Materials ›› 2021, Vol. 28 ›› Issue (4) : 710 -717. DOI: 10.1007/s12613-020-2134-9
Article

Impact of travel speed on the microstructure and mechanical properties of adjustable-gap bobbin-tool friction stir welded Al-Mg joints

Author information +
History +
PDF

Abstract

The butt welds of 4-mm thick 5A06 aluminum alloy plates were produced by adjustable-gap bobbin-tool friction stir travel with travel speeds of 200, 300, and 400 mm/min in this study. The microstructure was studied using optical microscopy and electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD). Tensile tests and microhardness measurements were performed to identify the effect of the travel speed on the joint mechanical properties. Sound joints were obtained at 200 mm/min while voids were present at different positions of the joints as the travel speed increased. The EBSD results show that the grain size, high angle grain boundaries, and density of geometrically necessary dislocations in different regions of the joint vary depending on the recovery and recrystallization behavior. Specific attention was given to the relationship between the local microstructure and mechanical properties. Microhardness measurements show that the average hardness of the stir zone (SZ) was greater than that of the base material, which was only affected slightly by the travel speed. The tensile strength of the joint decreased with increasing travel speed and the maximal strength efficiency reached 99%.

Keywords

friction stir welding / bobbin-tool / aluminum alloy / microstructure / mechanical properties / adjustable-gap

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
Dong Wu, Wen-ya Li, Yan-jun Gao, Jun Yang, Quan Wen, Nektarios Vidakis, Achillefs Vairis. Impact of travel speed on the microstructure and mechanical properties of adjustable-gap bobbin-tool friction stir welded Al-Mg joints. International Journal of Minerals, Metallurgy, and Materials, 2021, 28(4): 710-717 DOI:10.1007/s12613-020-2134-9

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

[1]

Garg A, Raturi M, Bhattacharya A. Metallurgical behavior and variation of vibro-acoustic signal during preheating assisted friction stir travel between AA6061-T6 and AA7075-T651 alloys. Trans. Nonferrous Met. Soc. China, 2019, 29(8): 1610.

[2]

Kapoor R, Kumar N, Mishra RS, Huskamp CS, Sankaran KK. Influence of fraction of high angle boundaries on the mechanical behavior of an ultrafine grained Al-Mg alloy. Mater. Sci. Eng. A, 2010, 527(20): 5246.

[3]

Esmaily M, Mortazavi N, Osikowicz W, Hindsefelt H, Svensson JE, Halvarsson M, Martin J, Johansson LG. Bobbin and conventional friction stir travel of thick extruded AA6005-T6 profiles. Mater. Des., 2016, 108, 114.

[4]

Shen JJ, Wang FF, Suhuddin UFH, Hu SY, Li WY, Dos Santos JF. Crystallographic texture in bobbin tool friction-stir-welded aluminum. Metall. Mater. Trans. A, 2015, 46(7): 2809.

[5]

W.M. Thomas, J. Martin, and C.S. Wiesner, Discovery invention and innovation of friction technologies — for the aluminium industries, [in] Proceedings of The 11th International Aluminium Conference INALCO 2010, Amsterdam, 2010.

[6]

Wang FF, Li WY, Shen J, Hu SY, Dos Santos JF. Effect of tool rotational speed on the microstructure and mechanical properties of bobbin tool friction stir travel of Al-Li alloy. Mater. Des., 2015, 86, 933.

[7]

Huang YX, Wan L, Huang TF, Lv ZL, Zhou L, Feng JC. The weld formation of self-support friction stir welds for aluminum hollow extrusion. Int. J. Adv. Manuf. Technol., 2016, 87(1–4): 1067.

[8]

Wen Q, Li WY, Gao YJ, Yang J, Wang FF. Numerical simulation and experimental investigation of band patterns in bobbin tool friction stir travel of aluminum alloy. Int. J. Adv. Manuf. Technol., 2019, 100(9–12): 2679.

[9]

Sued MK, Pons D, Lavroff J, Wong EH. Design features for bobbin friction stir travel tools: Development of a conceptual model linking the underlying physics to the production process. Mater. Des., 2014, 54, 632.

[10]

Zhou L, Li GH, Liu CL, Wang J, Huang YX, Feng JC, Meng FX. Microstructural characteristics and mechanical properties of Al-Mg-Si alloy self-reacting friction stir welded joints. Sci. Technol. Weld. Joining, 2017, 22(5): 438.

[11]

Fuse K, Badheka V. Bobbin tool friction stir welding: A review. Sci. Technol. Weld. Joining, 2019, 24(4): 277.

[12]

Mohammad Kamil S. Fixed Bobbin Friction Stir Welding of Marine Grade Aluminium, 2015, Christchurch, University of Canterbury [Dissertation]

[13]

Zhang HJ, Wang M, Zhang X, Yang GX. Microstructural characteristics and mechanical properties of bobbin tool friction stir welded 2A14-T6 aluminum alloy. Mater. Des., 2015, 65, 559.

[14]

Zhou L, Li GH, Zha GD, Shu FY, Liu HJ, Feng JC. Effect of rotation speed on microstructure and mechanical properties of bobbin tool friction stir welded AZ61 magnesium alloy. Sci. Technol. Weld. Joining, 2018, 23(7): 596.

[15]

Zandsalimi S, Heidarzadeh A, Saeid T. Dissimilar friction-stir travel of 430 stainless steel and 6061 aluminum alloy: Microstructure and mechanical properties of the joints. Proc. Inst. Mech. Eng., Part L: J. Mater.: Des. Appl., 2019, 233(9): 1791.

[16]

Calcagnotto M, Ponge D, Demir E, Raabe D. Orientation gradients and geometrically necessary dislocations in ultrafine grained dual-phase steels studied by 2D and 3D EBSD. Mater. Sci. Eng. A, 2010, 527(10–11): 2738.

[17]

Wright SI, Nowell MM, Field DP. A review of strain analysis using electron backscatter diffraction. Microsc. Microanal., 2011, 17(3): 316.

[18]

Badji R, Chauveau T, Bacroix B. Texture, misorientation and mechanical anisotropy in a deformed dual phase stainless steel weld joint. Mater. Sci. Eng. A, 2013, 575, 94.

[19]

Pantleon W. Resolving the geometrically necessary dislocation content by conventional electron backscattering diffraction. Scripta Mater., 2008, 58(11): 994.

[20]

Wei DX, Koizumi Y, Nagasako M, Chiba A. Refinement of lamellar structures in Ti-Al alloy. Acta Mater., 2017, 125, 81.

[21]

Yan CK, Feng AH, Qu SJ, Cao GJ, Sun JL, Shen J, Chen DL. Dynamic recrystallization of titanium: Effect of preactivated twinning at cryogenic temperature. Acta Mater., 2018, 154, 311.

[22]

G.H. Li, L. Zhou, S.F. Luo, F.B. Dong, and N. Guo, Microstructure and mechanical properties of bobbin tool friction stir welded ZK60 magnesium alloy, Mater. Sci. Eng. A, 776(2020), art. No. 138953.

[23]

Niu PL, Li WY, Vairis A, Chen DL. Cyclic deformation behavior of friction-stir-welded dissimilar AA5083-to-AA2024 joints: Effect of microstructure and loading history. Mater. Sci. Eng. A, 2019, 744, 145.

[24]

Su JQ, Nelson TW, Mishra R, Mahoney M. Microstructural investigation friction stir welded 7050-T651 aluminium. Acta Mater., 2003, 51(3): 713.

[25]

Zhang ZH, Li WY, Feng Y, Li JL, Chao YJ. Global anisotropic response of friction stir welded 2024 aluminum sheets. Acta Mater., 2015, 92, 117.

[26]

Kamikawa N, Huang XX, Tsuji N, Hansen N. Strengthening mechanisms in nanostructured high-purity aluminium deformed to high strain and annealed. Acta Mater., 2009, 57(14): 4198.

[27]

Jata KV, Semiatin SL. Continuous dynamic recrystallization during friction stir travel of high strength aluminum alloys. Scripta Mater., 2000, 43(8): 743.

[28]

Fan GJ, Choo H, Liaw PK, Lavernia EJ. Plastic deformation and fracture of ultrafine-grained Al-Mg alloys with a bimodal grain size distribution. Acta Mater., 2006, 54(7): 1759.

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF

159

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/