High-speed friction-stir welding to enable aluminum tailor-welded blanks

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Abstract

Current welding technologies for production of aluminum tailor-welded blanks (TWBs) are utilized in low-volume and niche applications, and they have yet to be scaled for the high-volume vehicle market. This study targeted further weight reduction, part reduction, and cost savings by enabling tailor-welded blank technology for aluminum alloys at high volumes. While friction-stir welding (FSW) has been traditionally applied at linear velocities less than 1 m/min, high-volume production applications demand the process be extended to higher velocities more amenable to cost-sensitive production environments. Unfortunately, weld parameters and performance developed and characterized at low-to-moderate welding velocities do not directly translate to high-speed linear FSW. Therefore, to facilitate production of high-volume aluminum FSW components, parameters were developed with a minimum welding velocity of 3 m/min. With an emphasis on weld quality, welded blanks were evaluated for postweld formability using a combination of numerical and experimental methods. An evaluation across scales was ultimately validated by stamping full-size production door inner panels made from dissimilar thickness aluminum TWBs, which provided validation of the numerical and experimental analysis of laboratory-scale tests.

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APA

Hovanski, Y., Upadhyay, P., Carsley, J., Luzanski, T., Carlson, B., Eisenmenger, M., … Hartfield-Wunsch, S. (2015). High-speed friction-stir welding to enable aluminum tailor-welded blanks. JOM, 67(5), 1045–1053. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11837-015-1384-x

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