Electromagnetic pulse welding (EMPW), an innovative high-speed joining technique, is a potential method for the automotive industry in joining and assembly of dissimilar lightweight metals with drastically different melting temperatures and other thermal physical properties, such as thermal conductivity and thermal expansion coefficients. The weld quality of EMPW is significantly affected by a variety of interacting physical phenomena including large plastic deformation, materials mixing, localized heating and rapid cooling, possible localized melting and subsequent diffusion and solidification, micro-cracking and void, etc. In the present study, a thermo-mechanically coupled dynamic model has been developed to quantitatively resolve the high-speed impact joining interface characteristics as well as the process-induced interface temperature evolution, defect formation and possible microstructural composition variation. Reasonably good agreement has been obtained between the predicted results and experimental measurements in terms of interfacial morphology characteristics. The modeling framework is expected to provide further understanding of the hierarchical interfacial features of the non-equilibrium material joining process and weld formation mechanisms involved in the EMPW operation, thus accelerating future development and deployment of this advanced joining technology.
Revised: November 30, 2016 |
Published: May 11, 2016
Citation
Xu W., and X. Sun. 2016.Numerical investigation of electromagnetic pulse welded interfaces between dissimilar metals.Science and Technology of Welding and Joining 21, no. 7:592-599.PNNL-SA-112875.doi:10.1179/1362171815Y.0000000092