TY - JOUR
T1 - Underwater Robotic Welding of Lap Joints with Sandwiched Reactive Multilayers
T2 - Thermal, Mechanical and Material Analysis
AU - Hussein, Aseel
AU - Alkhoori, Ayesha
AU - Al Zaabi, Abdelaziz
AU - Stefanini, Cesare
AU - Renda, Federico
AU - Jaffar, Syed
AU - Gunduz, Ibrahim Emre
AU - Polychronopoulou, Kyriaki
AU - Rebholz, Claus Georg
AU - Doumanidis, Charalabos Constantinos
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by a Khalifa University Internal Research Fund (level 1) award.
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2018.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Underwater welding using reactive materials pre-deposited at the junction surfaces as a self-contained, in-situ ignitable heat source mitigates external power and gas supply requirements. Consequently, lending itself to robotic implementation eliminating the cost along with health and safety hazards of human welder-divers. This project reports on lap joining of aluminum sheets with sandwiched commercial reactive Ni-Al multilayers that are perforated to allow for melt fusion under compression upon ignition, in saline and deionized water as well as air for comparison. Finite-element thermal simulations are employed to study the resulting welding temperature field and melt conditions. Infrared pyrometry and thermocouple measurements during welding were used to validate the computational simulations. The lap joints are subjected to standard shear testing, and comparable compliance, strength and toughness values of the welds are assessed for underwater and dry joints. Scanning electron (SEM) of the weld sections reveal rapidly melting and solidifying microstructures of the parent metal, with minimal melt flow and perfusion of nickel aluminide aggregates from the reacted multilayers, and no signs of cavitation.
AB - Underwater welding using reactive materials pre-deposited at the junction surfaces as a self-contained, in-situ ignitable heat source mitigates external power and gas supply requirements. Consequently, lending itself to robotic implementation eliminating the cost along with health and safety hazards of human welder-divers. This project reports on lap joining of aluminum sheets with sandwiched commercial reactive Ni-Al multilayers that are perforated to allow for melt fusion under compression upon ignition, in saline and deionized water as well as air for comparison. Finite-element thermal simulations are employed to study the resulting welding temperature field and melt conditions. Infrared pyrometry and thermocouple measurements during welding were used to validate the computational simulations. The lap joints are subjected to standard shear testing, and comparable compliance, strength and toughness values of the welds are assessed for underwater and dry joints. Scanning electron (SEM) of the weld sections reveal rapidly melting and solidifying microstructures of the parent metal, with minimal melt flow and perfusion of nickel aluminide aggregates from the reacted multilayers, and no signs of cavitation.
KW - nanoscale
KW - scanning electron microscopy (SEM)
KW - welding
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85045683623&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1557/adv.2018.310
DO - 10.1557/adv.2018.310
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85045683623
SN - 2059-8521
VL - 3
SP - 911
EP - 920
JO - MRS Advances
JF - MRS Advances
IS - 17
ER -