Effect of welding speed on microstructural evolution and mechanical properties of laser welded-brazed Al/brass dissimilar joints
2018
Abstract Laser welding-brazing process was developed for joining 5052 aluminum alloy and H62 brass in butt configuration with Zn-15%Al filler. Effect of welding speed on microstructural characteristics and mechanical properties of joints were investigated. Acceptable joints without obvious defect were obtained with the welding speed of 0.5–0.6 m/min, while lower and higher welding speed caused excessive back reinforcement and cracking, respectively. Three reaction layers were observed at welding speed of 0.3 m/min, which were Al 4.2 Cu 3.2 Zn 0.7 (τ′)/Al 4 Cu 9 /CuZn from weld seam side to brass side; while at welding speed of 0.4–0.6 m/min, two layers Al 4.2 Cu 3.2 Zn 0.7 and CuZn formed. The thickness of interfacial reaction layers increased with the decrease of welding speed, but varied little at different interfacial positions from top to bottom in one joint. Tensile test results indicated that the maximum joint tensile strength of 128 MPa was obtained at 0.5 m/min, which was 55.7% of that of Al base metal. All the joints fractured along the weld seam/brass interface. Some differences were found regarding fracture locations with three and two reaction layers. The joint fractured between Al 4 Cu 9 and τ′ IMC layer when the interface had three layers, while the crack occurred between CuZn and τ′ phase in the case of two layers.
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