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1
Introduction to welding
2
Overview of joining methods
 Mechanical methods
 Screwed fasteners, rivets,
 Adhesive bonding
 Brazing and Soldering
 Base metal does not fuse.
 Molten filler drawn into close-fit joints by capillary
action (surface tension forces).
 Brazing filler melts >450 C, solder <450 C
 Welding
Introduction to welding
3
Weld
 A joint produced by heat or pressure or both
So there is continuity of material.
 Filler (if used) has a melting temperature
close to the base material
Introduction to welding
4
Welding processes
 Fusion welding
 Welding in the liquid state with no pressure
 Union is by molten metal bridging
 Solid phase welding
 Carried out below the melting point without filler
additions
 Pressure often used
 Union is often by plastic flow
Introduction to welding
5
Introduction to welding
Basic Requirements of Welding Process
Source of Heat
Chemical Reaction
Electrical - Arc, Resistance, Induction
Vacuum
Mechanical
Protection from Atmosphere
Gas Shielding
Flux
Mechanical Expulsion
6
Fusion welding heat sources
Power beams
Laser
Electron beam
Spot, seam and
projection welding
Electroslag
Electric arcChemical reactionElectric resistance
Oxyfuel gas
welding
Thermit welding
MMAW
GMAW
GTAW
FCAW
SAW
Introduction to welding
7
Solid phase welding
 Hot processes
 Forge welding
 Friction welding
 Diffusion bonding
 Cold processes
 Ultrasonic welding
 Explosive welding
Introduction to welding
8
Some arc welding processes
 MMAW - manual metal arc welding
 SAW - submerged arc welding
 GTAW - gas tungsten arc welding (TIG)
 GMAW - gas-metal arc welding (MIG, MAG)
 FCAW - flux cored arc welding
Introduction to welding
9
The electric arc
 Electric discharge between 2
electrodes through ionised
gas
 10 to 2000 amps at 10 to
500 V arc voltage
 Column of ionised gas at high
temperature
 Forces stiffen the arc column
 Transfer of molten metal
from electrode to workpiece
 Can have a cleaning action,
breaking up oxides on
workpiece
+
- Cathode
drop zone
Anode
drop zone
Peak
temperatures
18,000 K
Introduction to welding
10
Arc energy
Q = arc energy in kJ/mm
E = current in amps
I = arc voltage
V = travel speed in mm/min
Low arc energy
• Small weld pool size
• Incomplete fusion
• High cooling rate
• Unwanted phase transformations
• Hydrogen cracking
High arc energy
• Large weld pool size
• Low cooling rate
• Increased solidification cracking risk
• Low ductility and strength
• Precipitation of unwanted phases
(corrosion and ductility)
Introduction to welding
Q =
E x I
V
11
Introduction to welding
• 103 Watts/cm2 melts most metals
• 106 -107 Watts/cm2 vaporizes most metals
• 103 to 106 Watts/cm2 typical for fusion welding
12
Manual Metal Arc Welding
MMAW,
SMAW,
Stick electrode welding
Manual welding
Introduction to welding
13
 Manual Metal Arc Welding
Heat source - arc between metal and a flux coated
electrode (1.6- 8 mm diameter)
 Current 30-400A (depends on electrode size)
 AC or DC operation
 Power 1 to 12 kW
Introduction to welding
14
Introduction to welding
Manual Metal Arc Welding
15
Manual Metal Arc Welding
Minimum equipment
 Power source (ac or dc, engine driven or
mains transformer)
 Electrode holder and leads
 May carry up to 300 amps
 Head shield with lens protects face & eyes
 Chipping hammer to remove slag
 Welding gloves protect hands from arc
radiation, hot material and electric shock
Introduction to welding
16
Manual Metal Arc Welding
Process features
 Simple portable equipment
 Widely practiced skills
 Applicable to wide range of materials, joints,
positions
 About 1kg weld deposited per arc-hour
 Portable and versatile
 Properties can be excellent
 Benchmark process
Introduction to welding
17
Manual Metal Arc Welding
Covered electrodes
Core wire
 Solid or tubular
 2mm to 8mm diameter,
250 to 450mm long
Coating
 Extruded as paste, dried
to strengthen
 Dipped into slurry and
dried (rare)
 Wound with paper or
chord (obsolete)
Introduction to welding
18
Manual Metal Arc Welding
Functions of coating
 Slag protects weld pool from oxidation
 Gas shielding also protects weld pool
 Surface tension (fluxing)
 Arc stabilising (ionising)
 Alloying and deoxidation
 Some ingredients aid manufacture
(binder and extrusion aids)
Introduction to welding
Manual Metal Arc Welding
AWS A5.1 classification
E XXXX - H
Useable positions
1=all positions
2=flat + horizontal
4=vertical down
Tensile Strength
in KPSI
Flux type
20 = Acidic (iron oxide)
10, 11 = Cellulosic
12, 13 = Rutile
24 = Rutile + iron powder
27 = Acidic + iron powder
16 = basic
18, 28 = basic + iron powder
Hydrogen level (HmR)
H = 5 ml / 100g of WM
R = low moisture pick-up
Introduction to welding
20
Manual Metal Arc Welding
Applications
 Wide range of welded products:
 light structure & Heavy steel structures
 Workshop and site
 High integrity (nuclear reactors, pressure
equipment)
 Ideal where access is difficult -
construction site, inside vessels,
underwater
 Joins a wide range of materials
Introduction to welding
21
Manual Metal Arc Welding
Limitations
 Low productivity
 Low power
 Low duty cycle (frequent electrode
changes)
 Hydrogen from flux coatings
 Electrode live all the time
 Arc strike, stray current and electric shock
risks
Introduction to welding
22
Submerged arc welding
SAW,
Sub-arc
Introduction to welding
23
Introduction to welding
Submerged arc welding
24
Introduction to welding
Submerged arc welding
Submerged arc welding - Features
High productivity
 2 to 10 kg/hour
 Up to 2m/min
Bulky, expensive and
heavy equipment
Flat and horizontal
positions only
Thicker sections (3mm
and above)
Mostly ferrous materials
(also Ni alloys)
Introduction to welding
26
Submerged arc welding - Equipment
Power source
Welding head and
control box
Welding head travel
Flux recovery system
(optional)
Positioners and
Fixtures
Introduction to welding
27
Submerged arc welding - Consumables
 Solid or cored wires
 Granular fluxes
 Agglomerated, fused or sintered
 Alloying activity
• Contribution to weld metal chemistry from flux
 Basicity
• Acid fluxes made from manganese oxide, silica, rutile are
easy to use
• Basic fluxes (MgO, CaO, CaF2, Al2O3) provide excellent
toughness welds
Introduction to welding
28
Submerged arc welding - Applications
 Long straight welds in heavier material
 Vessel longitudinal and circumferential
welds
 Flange to web joints of I beams
 Flat or horizontal position
 Flux has to be supported
 Access has to be good
Introduction to welding
29
Submerged arc welding
Process variations
 Surfacing and hardfacing
 Wire and strip electrodes
 Semi-automatic
 Multiple electrodes
 2 (and more) electrode wires
 From one or more power sources
 Iron powder additions to groove
Introduction to welding
30
Introduction to welding
Submerged arc welding – Tandem arc
31
Gas shielded arc process
Tungsten Inert Gas welding (TIG)
Gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW)
Introduction to welding
32
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding
Alternative names -
GTAW,TIG (Tungsten
Inert Gas), Argonarc
Heat source is an electric
arc between a non-
consumable electrode and
the workpiece
Filler metal is not added
or is added independently
Introduction to welding
33
Introduction to welding
Gas Tungsten arc welding
34
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding
Heat source - arc between a tungsten tip and the
parent metal
30-400A, AC or DC
10-20V
0.3-8kW
Inert gas shielding
Consumable filler rod can be used (1 to 4mm
diameter)
Introduction to welding
35
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Process features
Excellent control
 Stable arc at low power (80A at 11V)
 Independently added filler
 Ideal for intricate welds eg root runs in pipe or thin sheet
 Low productivity 0.5kg/h manual
High quality
 Clean process, no slag
 Low oxygen and nitrogen weld metal
 Defect free, excellent profile even for single sided welds
Introduction to welding
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Equipment
 Welding power source with constant
current characteristic
 DC for most metals, AC for Al
 Arc starting by high frequency (5000V, 0.05A)
 Sequence timers for arc starting, arc finishing &
gas control
 Water- or gas-cooled torch with tungsten
electrode
 Electrode may contain thoria or zirconia, etc
Introduction to welding
37
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Shielding gases
Torch is fed with an inert or reducing gas
 Pure argon - widespread applications
 Argon-helium - Higher arc voltage, inert
 Argon-2% hydrogen - Cu alloys & austenitic steel
 Torch gas must not contain oxygen or CO2
Backing (or purge) gas
 Used for all single-sided welds except in carbon steel
 Argon, nitrogen, formier gas (N2 + H2)
Supplementary shielding
 Reactive metals: Ti, etc
 Gas filled chambers or additional gas supply devices
Introduction to welding
38
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Filler metals
Autogenous welding (no filler)
Filler wire or rod of matching composition
 C-Mn & low alloy steel
 Stainless Steel
 Al, Mg, Ti
 Cu & Ni
Consumable inserts - filler preplaced in joint
Introduction to welding
39
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Automation
Introduction to welding
40
Introduction to welding
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding – A TIG
41
GMAW and FCAW
Gas metal arc welding
(MIG, MAG, CO2 welding)
Flux cored arc welding
Introduction to welding
42
Gas metal arc welding
A continuous solid wire, small
diameter
 GMAW uses solid wire, no flux
 FCAW uses flux-filled wire
Fed through the gun to the arc by
wire feeder.
The weld pool may be protected
from oxidation by shielding gas.
High productivity 3 kg/h or more
Direct current (DCEP mostly)
Introduction to welding
43
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding
44
 MIG Welding
Heat source - arc between parent metal
and consumable electrode wire (0.6 to
1.6mm diameter)
60-500A, DC only
16-40V
1 to 20kW
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding
45
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding
46
Gas metal arc welding - Equipment
Welding power source
Wire feeder mechanism
 May be in power source cabinet
Gun with gas supply & trigger
switch
 Manual (semiautomatic) guns
 Automatic torches available
 Can be fitted to robot etc
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding – Metal transfer
 Spray
 Higher current & voltage, argon-rich gas
 Short circuiting (dip)
 Low current and voltage, CO2
 Globular
 Intermediate current
 Pulsed current power sources
 Adjustable frequency
 One droplet per current pulse.
Introduction to welding
48Current
Voltage
No arc (birds-nesting)
Burn-back
and unstable arc
Spray
Globular
Short
circuiting
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding – Metal transfer
49
Gas metal arc welding - Consumables
 Solid Wires (GMAW)
 A wide variety of alloys are available
 Flux cored arc welding (FCAW)
 Gas shielded flux cored wires
 Self-shielded flux cored wires
• Used outdoors
 Metal cored wires
• Light flux cover
Introduction to welding
50
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding – Wire size
51
Gas metal arc welding - Gas mixtures
 Inert gases (MIG)
 Argon or helium or mixtures of these
 Active base metals, Al, Mg, Ti
 Active gases (MAG and FCAW)
 Carbon dioxide
 Argon plus oxygen and/or carbon dioxide
 Nitrogen, hydrogen
Introduction to welding
52
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding - Developments
53
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding - Developments
54
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding - Developments
55
Introduction to welding
Gas metal arc welding - Developments
56
Introduction to welding
Plasma Cutting, Welding & Surfacing
57
Introduction to welding
58
Introduction to welding
Neutral Flame
Oxidising Flame
Carburising Flame
Oxy-Acetylene Welding
59
Introduction to welding
Thermit welding
60
Introduction to welding
Laser Welding
• Photons transmit energy and heat
• Energy intensity up to 109 Watts/cm2
• Depth to width of hole up to 50x
• Automatic controllers needed
• 90% efficiency
• Reflectors don’t weld easily
61
Introduction to welding
Laser welding
62
Introduction to welding
Electron Beam Welding
• Electrons strike surface and generate heat
• Best performed in a vacuum
• Workpiece must be a conductor
• Magnetic fields affect beam
• Current to 1/2 A
• Power to 100 kW
• X-rays produced
63
Introduction to welding
Electron Beam Welding
64
Introduction to welding
Size of weld beads in
(a) electron-beam or laser-beam welding
(b) conventional arc welding.
65
Introduction to welding
Solid-State Welding
 Heat
 Pressure
 Time
 NO Melting
 NO Filler Material
 Intimate Contact
Usually Requires Deformation
 Works with Dissimilar Metals
66
Introduction to welding
Resistance Welding
67
Introduction to welding
Resistance spot welding Robots
68
Introduction to welding
Flash Butt Welding
69
Introduction to welding
Friction Welding
70
Introduction to welding
Friction Stir Welding
71
Introduction to welding
Friction Stir Welding
72
Introduction to welding
Explosive Welding
73
Introduction to welding
74
Introduction to welding
75
Introduction to welding
76
Introduction to welding
77
Introduction to welding
78
ANY QUESTIONS
79
Introduction to welding
80
Introduction to welding
81
Introduction to welding
82
Introduction to welding
83
Introduction to welding
84
Introduction to welding

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Introduction to welding processes

  • 2. 2 Overview of joining methods  Mechanical methods  Screwed fasteners, rivets,  Adhesive bonding  Brazing and Soldering  Base metal does not fuse.  Molten filler drawn into close-fit joints by capillary action (surface tension forces).  Brazing filler melts >450 C, solder <450 C  Welding Introduction to welding
  • 3. 3 Weld  A joint produced by heat or pressure or both So there is continuity of material.  Filler (if used) has a melting temperature close to the base material Introduction to welding
  • 4. 4 Welding processes  Fusion welding  Welding in the liquid state with no pressure  Union is by molten metal bridging  Solid phase welding  Carried out below the melting point without filler additions  Pressure often used  Union is often by plastic flow Introduction to welding
  • 5. 5 Introduction to welding Basic Requirements of Welding Process Source of Heat Chemical Reaction Electrical - Arc, Resistance, Induction Vacuum Mechanical Protection from Atmosphere Gas Shielding Flux Mechanical Expulsion
  • 6. 6 Fusion welding heat sources Power beams Laser Electron beam Spot, seam and projection welding Electroslag Electric arcChemical reactionElectric resistance Oxyfuel gas welding Thermit welding MMAW GMAW GTAW FCAW SAW Introduction to welding
  • 7. 7 Solid phase welding  Hot processes  Forge welding  Friction welding  Diffusion bonding  Cold processes  Ultrasonic welding  Explosive welding Introduction to welding
  • 8. 8 Some arc welding processes  MMAW - manual metal arc welding  SAW - submerged arc welding  GTAW - gas tungsten arc welding (TIG)  GMAW - gas-metal arc welding (MIG, MAG)  FCAW - flux cored arc welding Introduction to welding
  • 9. 9 The electric arc  Electric discharge between 2 electrodes through ionised gas  10 to 2000 amps at 10 to 500 V arc voltage  Column of ionised gas at high temperature  Forces stiffen the arc column  Transfer of molten metal from electrode to workpiece  Can have a cleaning action, breaking up oxides on workpiece + - Cathode drop zone Anode drop zone Peak temperatures 18,000 K Introduction to welding
  • 10. 10 Arc energy Q = arc energy in kJ/mm E = current in amps I = arc voltage V = travel speed in mm/min Low arc energy • Small weld pool size • Incomplete fusion • High cooling rate • Unwanted phase transformations • Hydrogen cracking High arc energy • Large weld pool size • Low cooling rate • Increased solidification cracking risk • Low ductility and strength • Precipitation of unwanted phases (corrosion and ductility) Introduction to welding Q = E x I V
  • 11. 11 Introduction to welding • 103 Watts/cm2 melts most metals • 106 -107 Watts/cm2 vaporizes most metals • 103 to 106 Watts/cm2 typical for fusion welding
  • 12. 12 Manual Metal Arc Welding MMAW, SMAW, Stick electrode welding Manual welding Introduction to welding
  • 13. 13  Manual Metal Arc Welding Heat source - arc between metal and a flux coated electrode (1.6- 8 mm diameter)  Current 30-400A (depends on electrode size)  AC or DC operation  Power 1 to 12 kW Introduction to welding
  • 15. 15 Manual Metal Arc Welding Minimum equipment  Power source (ac or dc, engine driven or mains transformer)  Electrode holder and leads  May carry up to 300 amps  Head shield with lens protects face & eyes  Chipping hammer to remove slag  Welding gloves protect hands from arc radiation, hot material and electric shock Introduction to welding
  • 16. 16 Manual Metal Arc Welding Process features  Simple portable equipment  Widely practiced skills  Applicable to wide range of materials, joints, positions  About 1kg weld deposited per arc-hour  Portable and versatile  Properties can be excellent  Benchmark process Introduction to welding
  • 17. 17 Manual Metal Arc Welding Covered electrodes Core wire  Solid or tubular  2mm to 8mm diameter, 250 to 450mm long Coating  Extruded as paste, dried to strengthen  Dipped into slurry and dried (rare)  Wound with paper or chord (obsolete) Introduction to welding
  • 18. 18 Manual Metal Arc Welding Functions of coating  Slag protects weld pool from oxidation  Gas shielding also protects weld pool  Surface tension (fluxing)  Arc stabilising (ionising)  Alloying and deoxidation  Some ingredients aid manufacture (binder and extrusion aids) Introduction to welding
  • 19. Manual Metal Arc Welding AWS A5.1 classification E XXXX - H Useable positions 1=all positions 2=flat + horizontal 4=vertical down Tensile Strength in KPSI Flux type 20 = Acidic (iron oxide) 10, 11 = Cellulosic 12, 13 = Rutile 24 = Rutile + iron powder 27 = Acidic + iron powder 16 = basic 18, 28 = basic + iron powder Hydrogen level (HmR) H = 5 ml / 100g of WM R = low moisture pick-up Introduction to welding
  • 20. 20 Manual Metal Arc Welding Applications  Wide range of welded products:  light structure & Heavy steel structures  Workshop and site  High integrity (nuclear reactors, pressure equipment)  Ideal where access is difficult - construction site, inside vessels, underwater  Joins a wide range of materials Introduction to welding
  • 21. 21 Manual Metal Arc Welding Limitations  Low productivity  Low power  Low duty cycle (frequent electrode changes)  Hydrogen from flux coatings  Electrode live all the time  Arc strike, stray current and electric shock risks Introduction to welding
  • 25. Submerged arc welding - Features High productivity  2 to 10 kg/hour  Up to 2m/min Bulky, expensive and heavy equipment Flat and horizontal positions only Thicker sections (3mm and above) Mostly ferrous materials (also Ni alloys) Introduction to welding
  • 26. 26 Submerged arc welding - Equipment Power source Welding head and control box Welding head travel Flux recovery system (optional) Positioners and Fixtures Introduction to welding
  • 27. 27 Submerged arc welding - Consumables  Solid or cored wires  Granular fluxes  Agglomerated, fused or sintered  Alloying activity • Contribution to weld metal chemistry from flux  Basicity • Acid fluxes made from manganese oxide, silica, rutile are easy to use • Basic fluxes (MgO, CaO, CaF2, Al2O3) provide excellent toughness welds Introduction to welding
  • 28. 28 Submerged arc welding - Applications  Long straight welds in heavier material  Vessel longitudinal and circumferential welds  Flange to web joints of I beams  Flat or horizontal position  Flux has to be supported  Access has to be good Introduction to welding
  • 29. 29 Submerged arc welding Process variations  Surfacing and hardfacing  Wire and strip electrodes  Semi-automatic  Multiple electrodes  2 (and more) electrode wires  From one or more power sources  Iron powder additions to groove Introduction to welding
  • 30. 30 Introduction to welding Submerged arc welding – Tandem arc
  • 31. 31 Gas shielded arc process Tungsten Inert Gas welding (TIG) Gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW) Introduction to welding
  • 32. 32 Gas Tungsten Arc Welding Alternative names - GTAW,TIG (Tungsten Inert Gas), Argonarc Heat source is an electric arc between a non- consumable electrode and the workpiece Filler metal is not added or is added independently Introduction to welding
  • 33. 33 Introduction to welding Gas Tungsten arc welding
  • 34. 34 Gas Tungsten Arc Welding Heat source - arc between a tungsten tip and the parent metal 30-400A, AC or DC 10-20V 0.3-8kW Inert gas shielding Consumable filler rod can be used (1 to 4mm diameter) Introduction to welding
  • 35. 35 Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Process features Excellent control  Stable arc at low power (80A at 11V)  Independently added filler  Ideal for intricate welds eg root runs in pipe or thin sheet  Low productivity 0.5kg/h manual High quality  Clean process, no slag  Low oxygen and nitrogen weld metal  Defect free, excellent profile even for single sided welds Introduction to welding
  • 36. Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Equipment  Welding power source with constant current characteristic  DC for most metals, AC for Al  Arc starting by high frequency (5000V, 0.05A)  Sequence timers for arc starting, arc finishing & gas control  Water- or gas-cooled torch with tungsten electrode  Electrode may contain thoria or zirconia, etc Introduction to welding
  • 37. 37 Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Shielding gases Torch is fed with an inert or reducing gas  Pure argon - widespread applications  Argon-helium - Higher arc voltage, inert  Argon-2% hydrogen - Cu alloys & austenitic steel  Torch gas must not contain oxygen or CO2 Backing (or purge) gas  Used for all single-sided welds except in carbon steel  Argon, nitrogen, formier gas (N2 + H2) Supplementary shielding  Reactive metals: Ti, etc  Gas filled chambers or additional gas supply devices Introduction to welding
  • 38. 38 Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Filler metals Autogenous welding (no filler) Filler wire or rod of matching composition  C-Mn & low alloy steel  Stainless Steel  Al, Mg, Ti  Cu & Ni Consumable inserts - filler preplaced in joint Introduction to welding
  • 39. 39 Gas Tungsten Arc Welding - Automation Introduction to welding
  • 40. 40 Introduction to welding Gas Tungsten Arc Welding – A TIG
  • 41. 41 GMAW and FCAW Gas metal arc welding (MIG, MAG, CO2 welding) Flux cored arc welding Introduction to welding
  • 42. 42 Gas metal arc welding A continuous solid wire, small diameter  GMAW uses solid wire, no flux  FCAW uses flux-filled wire Fed through the gun to the arc by wire feeder. The weld pool may be protected from oxidation by shielding gas. High productivity 3 kg/h or more Direct current (DCEP mostly) Introduction to welding
  • 43. 43 Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding
  • 44. 44  MIG Welding Heat source - arc between parent metal and consumable electrode wire (0.6 to 1.6mm diameter) 60-500A, DC only 16-40V 1 to 20kW Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding
  • 45. 45 Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding
  • 46. 46 Gas metal arc welding - Equipment Welding power source Wire feeder mechanism  May be in power source cabinet Gun with gas supply & trigger switch  Manual (semiautomatic) guns  Automatic torches available  Can be fitted to robot etc Introduction to welding
  • 47. Gas metal arc welding – Metal transfer  Spray  Higher current & voltage, argon-rich gas  Short circuiting (dip)  Low current and voltage, CO2  Globular  Intermediate current  Pulsed current power sources  Adjustable frequency  One droplet per current pulse. Introduction to welding
  • 48. 48Current Voltage No arc (birds-nesting) Burn-back and unstable arc Spray Globular Short circuiting Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding – Metal transfer
  • 49. 49 Gas metal arc welding - Consumables  Solid Wires (GMAW)  A wide variety of alloys are available  Flux cored arc welding (FCAW)  Gas shielded flux cored wires  Self-shielded flux cored wires • Used outdoors  Metal cored wires • Light flux cover Introduction to welding
  • 50. 50 Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding – Wire size
  • 51. 51 Gas metal arc welding - Gas mixtures  Inert gases (MIG)  Argon or helium or mixtures of these  Active base metals, Al, Mg, Ti  Active gases (MAG and FCAW)  Carbon dioxide  Argon plus oxygen and/or carbon dioxide  Nitrogen, hydrogen Introduction to welding
  • 52. 52 Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding - Developments
  • 53. 53 Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding - Developments
  • 54. 54 Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding - Developments
  • 55. 55 Introduction to welding Gas metal arc welding - Developments
  • 56. 56 Introduction to welding Plasma Cutting, Welding & Surfacing
  • 58. 58 Introduction to welding Neutral Flame Oxidising Flame Carburising Flame Oxy-Acetylene Welding
  • 60. 60 Introduction to welding Laser Welding • Photons transmit energy and heat • Energy intensity up to 109 Watts/cm2 • Depth to width of hole up to 50x • Automatic controllers needed • 90% efficiency • Reflectors don’t weld easily
  • 62. 62 Introduction to welding Electron Beam Welding • Electrons strike surface and generate heat • Best performed in a vacuum • Workpiece must be a conductor • Magnetic fields affect beam • Current to 1/2 A • Power to 100 kW • X-rays produced
  • 64. 64 Introduction to welding Size of weld beads in (a) electron-beam or laser-beam welding (b) conventional arc welding.
  • 65. 65 Introduction to welding Solid-State Welding  Heat  Pressure  Time  NO Melting  NO Filler Material  Intimate Contact Usually Requires Deformation  Works with Dissimilar Metals