Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Jan 2024)
Coaxial one-side resistance spot welding for cross-lap joints of Al5052 and CFRP: Thermal process and strength evaluation
Abstract
Coaxial one-side resistance welding (COS-RSW) is an advanced joining technology for the metal-plastic hybrid structure, which has great application potential in the lightweight design of body-in-white. In the present research, the Al5052-CFRP cross-lap joints were fabricated by COS-RSW with different welding conditions. The author-developed finite element (FE) code JWRIAN-RSW was employed to reproduce the multi-physics coupled phenomena of COS-RSW and predict thermal history. The influence of welding current and welding time on molten zone generation and joining strength was discussed in detail. The results showed that the developed FE model can predict temperature distribution and variation effectively, which were verified by the bonding zone observation and infrared thermal image measurement. Both welding current and welding time had a significant contribution to the Joule heat generation. While their influence on the molten zone growth during heating and cooling stage was distinct. The maximum joining strength of COS-RSW cross-lap joints can reach about 1380 N. The static tensile strength was improved significantly when the maximum interface temperature exceeded 340 °C and the failure mode altered into staged fracture. The strength degradation induced by significant CFRP decomposition was appeared when the predicted interface temperature reached 410 °C. For the COS-RSW joint of Al5052 and CFRP, it was better to improve the joining strength using longer welding time rather than higher welding current, which led to sufficient heat generation, persistent thermal conduction and elongated melting duration for sound joining.