Evaluation of Corrosion and Its Impact on the Mechanical Performance of Al–Steel Joints
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Procedure
2.1. Materials and Joining Experiments
2.2. Methods for an In-Depth Analysis of Corrosion Evolution
2.2.1. Cyclic Corrosion Testing
2.2.2. As-Received Material Electrochemical Response
2.2.3. Strain-Induced Electrochemical Response
2.2.4. Experimental Analysis
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Electrochemical Measurements
3.2. Corrosion Behavior of Al–Steel Joints
3.2.1. SPR Al–Steel Joints
3.2.2. RSW Al–Steel Joints
3.3. The Impact of Corrosion on the Mechanical Performance
3.4. Corrosion Mechanisms
4. Conclusions
- (1)
- Galvanic corrosion attacks AA 6022 at the overlapping area, and the most damaged zone attacked is AA 6022 at the overlap end, leaving large amounts of pits there, which decreases the joints’ stiffness significantly. The corrosion in AA 6022 propagates through the grain boundaries (IGC);
- (2)
- In SPR joints, the detrimental corrosion occurs when the steel is corroded and then the rivet is exposed, which will result in the decrease of the mechanical interlock and the mechanical performance; while in RSW joints, the detrimental corrosion attack is along the Al–steel interface and joints fail due to SSC;
- (3)
- Stress relaxation softens the joints and decreases the stiffness. Corrosion products collecting at the crevice help tighten the joints, which can increase the strength and the stiffness slightly;
- (4)
- The corrosion resistance of SPR joints is much better than that of RSW joints, including retaining the strength, stiffness, and energy absorbed at failure. The slower decrease of stiffness of the F-D curve indicates lower porosity of AA 6022 at the overlapping area and a lower level of galvanic corrosion attack.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
The displacement of crosshead; | |
The length of steel from the fixed end to the center of the joint; | |
The length of Al from moving end to the center of the joint; | |
The length of steel from moving end to the center of the joint when the displacement of the crosshead is ; | |
The length of Al from moving end to the center of the joint when the displacement of the crosshead is ; | |
The length of steel from the fixed end to the left overlap end; | |
The length of Al from moving end to the right overlap end; | |
The length of steel from the fixed end to the left overlap end when the displacement of the crosshead is ; | |
The length of Al from the fixed end to the left overlap end when the displacement of the crosshead is ; | |
The thickness of steel; | |
The thickness of Al; | |
The overlap distance; | |
The clamping force before loading; | |
The force applied to pull the as-received joint at a specific displacement of ; | |
The force applied to pull the corroded joint at a specific displacement of ; | |
The bending moment of steel; | |
The bending moment of Al; | |
The rotation angle of material; | |
The cross-section area of steel; | |
The cross-section area of Al. |
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Riveting Settings | Parameters |
---|---|
Rivet geometry | Nominal diameter: 5 mm; |
Under-head shank length: 5 mm; | |
Type: countersunk; | |
Material: Carbon steel and coated with zinc | |
Velocity | 315 mm/s |
Welding Settings | Parameters |
---|---|
Welding force | 4 KN |
Squeezing time | 250 ms |
Pre-heating Stage | 40 ms @7 KA, 10 ms cool |
Welding Stage 1 | 250 ms @12 KA, 250 ms cool |
Welding Stage 2 | 975 ms @13.4 KA |
Holding time | 250 ms |
Stages | Temperature | Humidity | Duration |
---|---|---|---|
Ambient Stage | 25 ± 3 °C | ~45 ± 10% RH | 8 h |
Humid Stage | 49 ± 2 °C | ~100% RH | 8 h |
Dry-off Stage | 60 ± 2 °C | ≤30% RH | 8 h |
Composition | Content (wt%) |
---|---|
NaCl | 0.9 |
CaCl2 | 0.1 |
NaHCO3 | 0.075 |
H2O | 98.925 |
Rolling Settings | Parameters |
---|---|
Diameter of the roller | 127 mm |
Rolling speed | 20 mm/s |
Thickness reduction | AA 6022: 41.7%; HSLA 340: 20%, 60% |
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Wen, W.; Carlson, B.; Banu, M. Evaluation of Corrosion and Its Impact on the Mechanical Performance of Al–Steel Joints. Materials 2024, 17, 3542. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17143542
Wen W, Carlson B, Banu M. Evaluation of Corrosion and Its Impact on the Mechanical Performance of Al–Steel Joints. Materials. 2024; 17(14):3542. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17143542
Chicago/Turabian StyleWen, Weiling, Blair Carlson, and Mihaela Banu. 2024. "Evaluation of Corrosion and Its Impact on the Mechanical Performance of Al–Steel Joints" Materials 17, no. 14: 3542. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17143542
APA StyleWen, W., Carlson, B., & Banu, M. (2024). Evaluation of Corrosion and Its Impact on the Mechanical Performance of Al–Steel Joints. Materials, 17(14), 3542. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17143542