Metals (Jun 2022)

Influence of Tool and Welding Parameters on the Risk of Wormhole Defect in Aluminum Magnesium Alloy Welded by Bobbin Tool FSW

  • Milan Pecanac,
  • Danka Labus Zlatanovic,
  • Nenad Kulundzic,
  • Miroslav Dramicanin,
  • Zorana Lanc,
  • Miodrag Hadzistević,
  • Slobodan Radisic,
  • Sebastian Balos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/met12060969
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 969

Abstract

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Bobbin tool friction stir welding (BTFSW) utilizes a special tool that possesses two shoulders interconnected by a pin instead of one: the top shoulder and the pin in the conventional FSW tool. This greatly simplifies the kinematics in the otherwise complicated setup of FSW since the bottom shoulder forms the bottom surface of the weld, without the need for a backing plate. Moreover, the tool enters the base metal sideways and travels, forming the joint in a straight line while rotating, without the need for downward and upward motion at the beginning and end of the process. This paper presents a study on the BTFSW tool geometry and parameters on the risk of wormhole defect formation in the AA5005 aluminum–magnesium alloy and the wormhole effect on mechanical properties. It was shown that higher stress imposed by the tool geometry on the joint has a significant influence on heating, an effect similar to the increased rotational speed. Optimal kinematic and geometrical tool properties are required to avoid wormhole defects. Although weld tensile strengths were lower (between ~111 and 115 MPa) compared with a base metal (137 MPa), the ductile fracture was obtained. Furthermore, all welds had a higher impact strength (between ~20.7 and 27.8 J) compared with the base material (~18.5 J); it was found that the wormhole defect only marginally influences the mechanical properties of welds.

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