During Friction Stir Welding (FSW), a non
Transcription
During Friction Stir Welding (FSW), a non
Friction Stir Welding of Hydrided Titanium Alloys Mark Taylor, D.P. Field Multi-Scale Engineering/ Materials Department During Friction Stir Welding (FSW), a non-consumable tool spins down an abutted joint, “stirring” material from both plates into each other. Being a solid-state welding process, much frictional heating and force is required of the tool. This steep demand on the tool give rise to failure after relatively few welds, making it an uneconomical process. However, by hydriding the plates, the amount of heat required to begin welding significantly decreases, which in turn puts a lesser demand on the tool. However, achieving the desired beta (β) phase with a lesser force remains to be proven. With certain relationships between crystallographic orientations, the resulting microstructure reveals whether the specimen was welded in a Body Center Cubic (BCC) β-phase, or if it stayed in a Hexagonal Close Packed (HCP) α-phase. From the phase diagram, it is evident that when inducing hydrogen into a Titanium specimen, the temperature at which the allotrophic phase transformation from αTi to βTi decreases. The Titanium alloy (Ti-6Al-4V) was cross-sectioned, and ultimately polished to a 0.02µ colloidal silica vibropolish for fifteen hours. The Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscope (FESEM) equipped with Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD) capability was used. The accompanying software, Orientation Imaging Microscopy (OIM) Analysis, was used to analyze the diffraction patterns and to represent the data in various forms. From the data gathered, only the highconfidence data (≥90% certain) were used. From the filtered data, pole figures and grain orientation maps were produced. After multiple scans in different regions of the Ti-6-4 welded plate, enough data was gathered to produce nice grain orientation maps to portray the grain structure at various locations. Bottom Middle of weld. Bottom edge of weld Unaffected base metal The images above were taken outside of the stir zone (SZ), the area that was previously welded. Notice as the images get closer to the weld, the size of the grains get smaller. The images below are of two different locations within the SZ. To further verify the data, a Burger’s Orientation Relationship exists between the transformed phase from BCC back to HCP. The relationship is <110>β → {0001}α. What this means is that the two planes should produce the same pole figure. When growth occurs after welding, the <110>β plane grows in a {0001}α direction. The image to the right is called an ideal shear plane used to compare the collected data against. Though this pole figure aligns fairly well, this was not representative of the majority of our data. Roughly 15% of the scan data revealed this relationship. More peculiarly, a relationship common to Face Center Cubic (FCC) shear was being achieved. Notice also how the pole figures tend to rotate as the scanned areas progress. . . From the two images, there is a noticeable clockwise rotation occurring. Unlike the images outside of the SZ, the images inside the SZ do not noticeably change with location. The weave-structure seen is called a Widmanstatten structure, a characteristic structure when deformed in BCC. Due to this sharp image contrast within and outside the SZ, it can be stated that welding occurred in a BCC β-phase. The data shows that the welding does occur while in BCC, but doesn’t match up very well with the ideal shear texture of Titanium. The pole figures derived from the SZ data would ideally produce a pole figure in the {0001} plane identical to that of the <110> BCC plane. There is, however, a rotation associated with consecutive steps in the SZ that shows how the rotating tool affects the microstructure at different distances from the tool’s center. Further analysis is necessary to comprehend the phenomena occurring in the SZ of the Ti-6-4 plate. However, it is certain that hydriding Titanium prior to welding will achieve the same microstructure while also decreasing amount of force required for welding. This work was supported by the National Science Foundation’s Research Experience for Undergraduates program under grant number EEC-0754370