Suppressing Aluminum Carbide in Welding Aluminum Silicon Carbide Composite

Weldability of aluminum-based metal matrix composite A359/SiC/10p using gas tungsten arc welding and R356.0 filler material is investigated. The welding current, welding speed, and preheat temperature affect the weld quality significantly. Finite element analysis is successfully applied to map the...

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Main Authors: Mitul Kothari, Wayne NP Hung
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Deer Hill Publications 2018-03-01
Series:International Journal of Engineering Materials and Manufacture
Online Access:http://deerhillpublishing.com/index.php/ijemm/article/view/47
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spelling doaj-bca56d11ae0d450797e2e336bf235f8c2020-11-24T21:59:01ZengDeer Hill PublicationsInternational Journal of Engineering Materials and Manufacture0128-18522018-03-013110.26776/ijemm.03.01.2018.0533Suppressing Aluminum Carbide in Welding Aluminum Silicon Carbide CompositeMitul Kothari0Wayne NP Hung1Stewart & Stevenson LLC, USATexas A&M University, USA Weldability of aluminum-based metal matrix composite A359/SiC/10p using gas tungsten arc welding and R356.0 filler material is investigated. The welding current, welding speed, and preheat temperature affect the weld quality significantly. Finite element analysis is successfully applied to map the weldment temperature during preheating and welding. During mechanical testing of welded specimens, a crack propagates in the parent composite or in the weld, but not in the stronger zone between the weld and the parent material. The weld region contains reasonably uniform distribution of SiC particles due to high viscosity of the molten weld and its fast cooling rate. Proper control of heat input and addition of silicon-rich filler material hinder the interface reaction between aluminum matrix and the reinforcing SiC particles, and successfully suppresses the formation of harmful aluminum carbide flakes in the weld. The average tensile and flexural strengths of optimally welded specimens approach those of the parent composite while its ductility exceeds that of the parent material. http://deerhillpublishing.com/index.php/ijemm/article/view/47
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mitul Kothari
Wayne NP Hung
spellingShingle Mitul Kothari
Wayne NP Hung
Suppressing Aluminum Carbide in Welding Aluminum Silicon Carbide Composite
International Journal of Engineering Materials and Manufacture
author_facet Mitul Kothari
Wayne NP Hung
author_sort Mitul Kothari
title Suppressing Aluminum Carbide in Welding Aluminum Silicon Carbide Composite
title_short Suppressing Aluminum Carbide in Welding Aluminum Silicon Carbide Composite
title_full Suppressing Aluminum Carbide in Welding Aluminum Silicon Carbide Composite
title_fullStr Suppressing Aluminum Carbide in Welding Aluminum Silicon Carbide Composite
title_full_unstemmed Suppressing Aluminum Carbide in Welding Aluminum Silicon Carbide Composite
title_sort suppressing aluminum carbide in welding aluminum silicon carbide composite
publisher Deer Hill Publications
series International Journal of Engineering Materials and Manufacture
issn 0128-1852
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Weldability of aluminum-based metal matrix composite A359/SiC/10p using gas tungsten arc welding and R356.0 filler material is investigated. The welding current, welding speed, and preheat temperature affect the weld quality significantly. Finite element analysis is successfully applied to map the weldment temperature during preheating and welding. During mechanical testing of welded specimens, a crack propagates in the parent composite or in the weld, but not in the stronger zone between the weld and the parent material. The weld region contains reasonably uniform distribution of SiC particles due to high viscosity of the molten weld and its fast cooling rate. Proper control of heat input and addition of silicon-rich filler material hinder the interface reaction between aluminum matrix and the reinforcing SiC particles, and successfully suppresses the formation of harmful aluminum carbide flakes in the weld. The average tensile and flexural strengths of optimally welded specimens approach those of the parent composite while its ductility exceeds that of the parent material.
url http://deerhillpublishing.com/index.php/ijemm/article/view/47
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AT waynenphung suppressingaluminumcarbideinweldingaluminumsiliconcarbidecomposite
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