Microstructural Inhomogeneity in the Fusion Zone of Laser Welds
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Procedure
2.1. Experimental Materials
2.2. Experimental Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Characteristics of Welded Joint Formation
- (a)
- The columnar zone (Figure 3a), positioned near the fusion line, exhibited elongated columnar structures, with significant length-to-width ratios. The arrows in the columnar zone represented the projection of the growth direction of the α-Al sub-grains onto the cross-section. It was observed that the sub-grains in this region displayed minimal deviation in this direction, indicating that the molten pool in this region experienced high, stable solidification conditions, with a consistent direction towards the maximum temperature gradient (G).
- (b)
- The central zone (Figure 3b), situated in proximity to the center of the weld, encompassed a disorderly mixture of long, short, fine, and coarse α-Al sub-grains. The mixture grains’ region served as a transitional region between the cellular and fine grain regions, and the structural features of α-Al sub-grains in this region consisted of cellular clusters with heterogeneous growth directions (shown by arrows in Figure 3b) and locally anisotropic equiaxed grains (shown by circles in Figure 3b).
- (c)
3.2. Weld Macroscopic Grain Distribution Patterns
3.3. Weld Macroscopic Grain Distribution Patterns
3.4. Mechanisms for the Formation of Non-Uniform Organizations
3.4.1. Equiaxed Crystals in the Central and Fine Grain Zone
3.4.2. Corrugated Organization of the Columnar Region
4. Conclusions
- In addition to the conventional structured columnar zone, disordered mixed central zone, and isotropic equiaxed zone, a locally non-uniform and discontinuous corrugated grain structure was observed during the solidification process from the fusion line to the center of the weld for α-Al sub-grains.
- Anomalous α-Al coarsening occurred in these regions, with a more dispersed crystallographic orientation arrangement and a lower maximum pole density value. In particular, the structural changes were more frequent at the bottom of the weld than the top. The reason for their formation was that the laser-induced keyhole showed continuous fluctuation. It destabilized the S/L interface, which caused the fusion of the growing dendritic arms and increased the supercooling at the oscillation to improve the nucleation rate, whereas the decrease in the temperature gradient increased the growth time of the α-Al sub-grains to be coarsened.
- The existence of periodic oscillations indicated that the keyhole was in a continuous fluctuation, and that the weld quality of the material was in a critical state. Even with other consistent conditions, the inherent inhomogeneity of the material could result in a significant uncontrollability in weld quality. The quantity of corrugated areas was used as a new way of determining material weldability (micron level), and monitoring and controlling their formation resulted in a process window with better weld stability and greater tolerance for material and environmental changes.
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Element | Cu | Mg | Mn | Fe | Zn | Al |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wt. % | 4.87 | 1.28 | 0.61 | 0.21 | 0.49 | Balance |
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Wang, L.; Ma, X.; Mi, G.; Su, L.; Zhu, Z. Microstructural Inhomogeneity in the Fusion Zone of Laser Welds. Materials 2023, 16, 7053. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16217053
Wang L, Ma X, Mi G, Su L, Zhu Z. Microstructural Inhomogeneity in the Fusion Zone of Laser Welds. Materials. 2023; 16(21):7053. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16217053
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Libo, Xiuquan Ma, Gaoyang Mi, Lei Su, and Zhengwu Zhu. 2023. "Microstructural Inhomogeneity in the Fusion Zone of Laser Welds" Materials 16, no. 21: 7053. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16217053
APA StyleWang, L., Ma, X., Mi, G., Su, L., & Zhu, Z. (2023). Microstructural Inhomogeneity in the Fusion Zone of Laser Welds. Materials, 16(21), 7053. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16217053