Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints

Due to their outstanding corrosion resistance, mechanical characteristics and low specific density, AA5083 and AA6061-T6 Al alloys are used in the aerospace, automotive and marine sectors. Joining such dissimilar Al alloys using conventional fusion welding techniques is very challenging. In contrast...

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Main Authors: Baqer, Y. M., Ramesh, S., Yusof, F., Ibrahim, M. Z.
Format: Article
Published: Old City Publishing 2024
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/47075/
https://www.oldcitypublishing.com/journals/lie-home/lie-issue-contents/lie-volume-57-number-4-6-2024/lie-57-4-6-p-367-385/
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spelling my.um.eprints.470752025-01-03T08:31:04Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/47075/ Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints Baqer, Y. M. Ramesh, S. Yusof, F. Ibrahim, M. Z. TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery Due to their outstanding corrosion resistance, mechanical characteristics and low specific density, AA5083 and AA6061-T6 Al alloys are used in the aerospace, automotive and marine sectors. Joining such dissimilar Al alloys using conventional fusion welding techniques is very challenging. In contrast, laser beam welding (LBW) is a non-conventional welding technique that is promising to weld dissimilar materials. The viability of welding dissimilar AA5083 and AA6061-T6 joints using fibre laser welding are examined herein. The effect of laser power and welding speed on the morphological, microstructural, microhardness and tensile strength of the welded joints was assessed and revealed that increasing welding power resulted in deeper keyhole penetration. Microporosities were formed due to Mg evaporation and shrinkages; however, the existence of these porosities did not show significant effect on the tensile strength. The microhardness values indicate that the welds were harder than the AA6061 and AA5083 base metals. This is explained by the existence of Mg2Si phase in the AA5083-AA6061 dissimilar junction in addition to the grain size circumstances. The fracture examination showed brittle fracture pattern that is regarded to the formation of brittle intermetallic compound (IMC) phases of Mg2Si, in addition to the inter-dendritic brittle phases of other sites as they were frequently inter-granular. Old City Publishing 2024 Article PeerReviewed Baqer, Y. M. and Ramesh, S. and Yusof, F. and Ibrahim, M. Z. (2024) Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints. Lasers in Engineering, 57 (4-6). pp. 367-385. ISSN 0898-1507, https://www.oldcitypublishing.com/journals/lie-home/lie-issue-contents/lie-volume-57-number-4-6-2024/lie-57-4-6-p-367-385/
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery
spellingShingle TJ Mechanical engineering and machinery
Baqer, Y. M.
Ramesh, S.
Yusof, F.
Ibrahim, M. Z.
Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints
description Due to their outstanding corrosion resistance, mechanical characteristics and low specific density, AA5083 and AA6061-T6 Al alloys are used in the aerospace, automotive and marine sectors. Joining such dissimilar Al alloys using conventional fusion welding techniques is very challenging. In contrast, laser beam welding (LBW) is a non-conventional welding technique that is promising to weld dissimilar materials. The viability of welding dissimilar AA5083 and AA6061-T6 joints using fibre laser welding are examined herein. The effect of laser power and welding speed on the morphological, microstructural, microhardness and tensile strength of the welded joints was assessed and revealed that increasing welding power resulted in deeper keyhole penetration. Microporosities were formed due to Mg evaporation and shrinkages; however, the existence of these porosities did not show significant effect on the tensile strength. The microhardness values indicate that the welds were harder than the AA6061 and AA5083 base metals. This is explained by the existence of Mg2Si phase in the AA5083-AA6061 dissimilar junction in addition to the grain size circumstances. The fracture examination showed brittle fracture pattern that is regarded to the formation of brittle intermetallic compound (IMC) phases of Mg2Si, in addition to the inter-dendritic brittle phases of other sites as they were frequently inter-granular.
format Article
author Baqer, Y. M.
Ramesh, S.
Yusof, F.
Ibrahim, M. Z.
author_facet Baqer, Y. M.
Ramesh, S.
Yusof, F.
Ibrahim, M. Z.
author_sort Baqer, Y. M.
title Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints
title_short Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints
title_full Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints
title_fullStr Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints
title_full_unstemmed Failure Analysis and Microstructural Evolution of Fibre Laser Welded Dissimilar Al Alloy Joints
title_sort failure analysis and microstructural evolution of fibre laser welded dissimilar al alloy joints
publisher Old City Publishing
publishDate 2024
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/47075/
https://www.oldcitypublishing.com/journals/lie-home/lie-issue-contents/lie-volume-57-number-4-6-2024/lie-57-4-6-p-367-385/
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score 13.244413