Lifang Mei, Yang Liu, Dongbing Yan, Jun Yang, Yu Liang, Shanming Luo
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The study employed laser scanning welding technology for butt welding experiments on red copper, investigating the behavior of metal vapor plumes, plasma, and metal spatter during the welding process, as well as the quality and electrical conductivity of the resulting joints by varying the polarity and strength of the applied magnetic field. The results showed that the polarity of the magnetic field had a minor effect on welding performance, with the main influencing factor being the strength of the magnetic field. As the magnetic field strength increased, the formation volume and ejection intensity of metal vapor plumes and plasma exhibited an initial decrease followed by an increase, similarly affecting the weld seam morphology, mechanical properties, and electrical conductivity. At 120 mT magnetic strength, metal vapor and plasma formation are minimized, and metal spattering is eliminated, thereby enhancing welding stability; the weld seam was uniformly formed with no significant defects; the cross-sectional weld was even without obvious undulations; on one side of the weld zone, columnar crystals were extremely fine, and the center of the weld consisted of numerous equiaxed crystals with a few columnar crystals perpendicular to the horizontal direction, while the equiaxed crystals on the other side of the weld zone were denser; the sample joints achieved peak hardness and tensile strength at 70.9 HV and 202 MPa, showing increases of 17.2% and 14.8%, respectively, over nonmagnetic conditions; the weldment’s conductivity peaked at 79.58 mS/m, 36.5% higher than without a magnetic field, reaching 97.9% of the parent material’s.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Laser Applications (JLA) is the scientific platform of the Laser Institute of America (LIA) and is published in cooperation with AIP Publishing. The high-quality articles cover a broad range from fundamental and applied research and development to industrial applications. Therefore, JLA is a reflection of the state-of-R&D in photonic production, sensing and measurement as well as Laser safety.
The following international and well known first-class scientists serve as allocated Editors in 9 new categories:
High Precision Materials Processing with Ultrafast Lasers
Laser Additive Manufacturing
High Power Materials Processing with High Brightness Lasers
Emerging Applications of Laser Technologies in High-performance/Multi-function Materials and Structures
Surface Modification
Lasers in Nanomanufacturing / Nanophotonics & Thin Film Technology
Spectroscopy / Imaging / Diagnostics / Measurements
Laser Systems and Markets
Medical Applications & Safety
Thermal Transportation
Nanomaterials and Nanoprocessing
Laser applications in Microelectronics.