Induction Weld Seam Characterization of Continuously Roll Formed TRIP690 Tubes
The weld seam characteristics of continuously roll formed and induction seam welded TRIP690 tubes were examined in this work. These tube are subsequently used in automotive hydroforming applications, where the weld seam characteristics are critical. The induction seam welds are created through a sol...
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2020-03-01
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doaj-aa0b379418b7481bbaf6b71c038429502020-11-25T01:29:03ZengMDPI AGMetals2075-47012020-03-0110442510.3390/met10040425met10040425Induction Weld Seam Characterization of Continuously Roll Formed TRIP690 TubesAlexander Bardelcik0Bharathwaj Thirumalai Ananthapillai1School of Engineering, College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, CanadaSchool of Engineering, College of Engineering and Physical Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, CanadaThe weld seam characteristics of continuously roll formed and induction seam welded TRIP690 tubes were examined in this work. These tube are subsequently used in automotive hydroforming applications, where the weld seam characteristics are critical. The induction seam welds are created through a solid-state welding process and it was shown that by increasing the induction frequency by 26%, the weld seam width within the heat affected zone (HAZ) reduced due to a plateau in the hardness distribution which was a result of a delay in the transformation of martensite. 2D hardness distribution contours were also created to show that some of the weld conditions examined in this work resulted in a strong asymmetric hardness distribution throughout the weld, which may be undesirable from a performance perspective. An increase in the pressure roll force was also examined and revealed that a wider total weld seam width was produced likely due to an increase in temperature which resulted in more austenitization of the sheet edge prior to welding. The ring hoop tension test (RHTT) was applied to the tube sections created in this work. A Tensile and Notch style ring specimen were tested and revealed excellent performance for these welds due to high peak loads (~17.2 kN) for the Notch specimens (force deformation within weld) and lower peak loads (~15.2 kN) for the Tensile specimens for which fracture occurred in the base metal.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/10/4/425induction weldingroll formingtrip690metallographymicrohardness testingring hoop tension test |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Alexander Bardelcik Bharathwaj Thirumalai Ananthapillai |
spellingShingle |
Alexander Bardelcik Bharathwaj Thirumalai Ananthapillai Induction Weld Seam Characterization of Continuously Roll Formed TRIP690 Tubes Metals induction welding roll forming trip690 metallography microhardness testing ring hoop tension test |
author_facet |
Alexander Bardelcik Bharathwaj Thirumalai Ananthapillai |
author_sort |
Alexander Bardelcik |
title |
Induction Weld Seam Characterization of Continuously Roll Formed TRIP690 Tubes |
title_short |
Induction Weld Seam Characterization of Continuously Roll Formed TRIP690 Tubes |
title_full |
Induction Weld Seam Characterization of Continuously Roll Formed TRIP690 Tubes |
title_fullStr |
Induction Weld Seam Characterization of Continuously Roll Formed TRIP690 Tubes |
title_full_unstemmed |
Induction Weld Seam Characterization of Continuously Roll Formed TRIP690 Tubes |
title_sort |
induction weld seam characterization of continuously roll formed trip690 tubes |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Metals |
issn |
2075-4701 |
publishDate |
2020-03-01 |
description |
The weld seam characteristics of continuously roll formed and induction seam welded TRIP690 tubes were examined in this work. These tube are subsequently used in automotive hydroforming applications, where the weld seam characteristics are critical. The induction seam welds are created through a solid-state welding process and it was shown that by increasing the induction frequency by 26%, the weld seam width within the heat affected zone (HAZ) reduced due to a plateau in the hardness distribution which was a result of a delay in the transformation of martensite. 2D hardness distribution contours were also created to show that some of the weld conditions examined in this work resulted in a strong asymmetric hardness distribution throughout the weld, which may be undesirable from a performance perspective. An increase in the pressure roll force was also examined and revealed that a wider total weld seam width was produced likely due to an increase in temperature which resulted in more austenitization of the sheet edge prior to welding. The ring hoop tension test (RHTT) was applied to the tube sections created in this work. A Tensile and Notch style ring specimen were tested and revealed excellent performance for these welds due to high peak loads (~17.2 kN) for the Notch specimens (force deformation within weld) and lower peak loads (~15.2 kN) for the Tensile specimens for which fracture occurred in the base metal. |
topic |
induction welding roll forming trip690 metallography microhardness testing ring hoop tension test |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/10/4/425 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT alexanderbardelcik inductionweldseamcharacterizationofcontinuouslyrollformedtrip690tubes AT bharathwajthirumalaiananthapillai inductionweldseamcharacterizationofcontinuouslyrollformedtrip690tubes |
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