Characteristics of Mechanical Properties and Microstructure of Micro Friction Stir Spot Welding of AA1100 and Brass
Friction stir spot welding (FSSW) is a type of solid state welding that has been widely developed using both similar and dissimilar materials. Aluminum AA1100 (99% Al) and brass (Cu-Zn) with a thickness of 0.42 mm are used in this welding joint. This resea...
| Published in: | International Journal of Technology |
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| Main Authors: | , , , , |
| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Universitas Indonesia
2021-12-01
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | https://ijtech.eng.ui.ac.id/article/view/5214 |
| Summary: | Friction stir spot welding (FSSW) is a type of solid
state welding that has been widely developed using both similar and dissimilar
materials. Aluminum AA1100 (99% Al) and brass (Cu-Zn) with a thickness of 0.42
mm are used in this welding joint.
This research investigates the characteristics of the lap shear force and
microstructure of micro FSSW joints on similar aluminum alloy AA1100, similar
brass, and dissimilar AA1100–brass materials using a pin tool made of
high-speed steel. The constant process parameters of the micro FSSW joint were
plunge depth, dwell time, plunge rate, and high tool rotational speed of 0.7
mm, 6 s, 4 mm/min, and 33,000 rpm, respectively. Micro FSSW joints were carried
out on similar AA1100, similar brass, and dissimilar materials whereby AA1100
was the upper sheet and brass was the lower sheet. The results of this research
show that micro FSSW joints have a higher lap shear force on similar materials
than dissimilar materials. The number of spots on the similar AA100 had no
significant effect on the lap shear force, while with similar brass, the number
of spots had a significant effect on lap shear force. The formation of a very
thin intermetallic compound layer in the nugget zone occurred in the dissimilar
materials. Moreover, observation results indicate that the similar AA1100 and
similar brass had a lap shear force with a plug fracture type, while the type
of fracture found in dissimilar materials was the interface failure mode. |
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| ISSN: | 2086-9614 2087-2100 |
