Summary: | High-power disk laser welding a steel plate using the Inconel 82 (IN82) filler wire with a 1.2 and 3.0 m/min feeding rate has been investigated in the experiment. The rapid thermal cycle combined with convection induced by the keyhole mechanism in laser welding results in the rapid solidification of the fusion zone (FZ). However, the microstructure of the FZ is not homogeneous at the macroscopic scale. The dilution of the FZ is important in determining the final microstructure of the weldment. For the specimen with a 1.2 m/min wire feeding rate, a lower amount of Ni-based IN82 filler is introduced into the weld pool, and the dilution of the FZ is between 65% and 100%. The BCC structure with high density boundaries dominates the entire FZ. For the specimen with a 3.0 m/min wire feeding rate, part of the filler melt is trapped on the top of the weld pool, and solidified into austenite alloyed with a Ni concentration above 15 at%. The range of dilution in the FZ with a 3.0 m/min wire feeding rate is decreased to 50–90%. There are hot cracks initiated/propagated along interdendritic austenite and in the austenite free of boundaries. Boundaries, especially for high-angle ones, in the BCC structure retard hot crack propagation in the FZ. The application of quantitative chemical analyses of Fe or Ni concentrations in the weldment provides a good approximation in evaluating the dilution of the FZ in laser welding. The methodology proposed in this study shows potential to obtain the dilution of any specific location in the FZ for industrial application in the future.
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