This invention relates to a welding method and apparatus suitable for welding aluminum while greatly minimizing weld porosity.
Porosity in welds reduces the strength and integrity of the weld. As will be described in more detail below, porosity can occur in aluminum welding processes. Due to more stringent requirements for the quality of welds than in other industries, the aerospace industry has particular interest in reducing the porosity of aluminum welds.
The typical cause of porosity in aluminum welds is hydrogen filled voids forming during solidification of the weld puddle. The source of the hydrogen often comes from moisture on the surface of the aluminum, moisture absorbed in the tenacious surface oxide layer of the aluminum, moisture in the shielding gas, and hydrocarbon contamination on the surface of the aluminum. The hydrogen is dissociated from the water or hydrocarbons and enters the molten aluminum due to the high solubility of hydrogen in molten aluminum. The solubility further increases with increasing temperatures. As the weld puddle solidifies, excess hydrogen is rejected in small pores of hydrogen gas scattered through the aluminum. In some cases the pores will coalesce and grow to a point where they will float to the surface of the molten aluminum and escape. Any remaining hydrogen bubbles will remain trapped within the solid aluminum thereby forming the spherical porosity typical of aluminum welding.
One approach to reducing porosity in welding aluminum has been to eliminate the hydrogen sources by cleaning, drying, removal of the oxide layer, and etching of the weld area. Because the shielding gas can be a source of the hydrogen, the moisture content of the shielding gas and its purity are typically tightly controlled to eliminate the hydrogen. Despite these industry efforts, excessive porosity in aluminum welds still exists.
Another approach has been to use chlorine in the shield gas. The chlorine has been effective in removing the hydrogen, but it results in highly corrosive chlorine gas being released into the local atmosphere. When its successively removes the hydrogen, dry hydrochloric acid is released into the local atmosphere. The chlorine gas and hydrochloric acid, in addition to being an occupational exposure hazard, is a great corrosion risk to equipment and facilities.
Accordingly, what is needed an improved method and apparatus to reduce porosity in aluminum welds.
The present invention relates to a welding apparatus and method for reducing the porosity of aluminum welds. Welding equipment that includes an electrode and a nozzle for delivering a shield gas is provided. An arc extends between an aluminum weldment and the electrode. The arc creates a weld puddle in a weld area of the aluminum weldment.
A tank including sulfur hexafluoride combines with hydrogen to reduce an amount of hydrogen in the weld area thereby reducing weld porosity. In one example, the sulfur hexafluoride may be part of a mixture within the tank that includes a base gas, such as a generally inert gas typically used for shielding. The mixture is delivered through the nozzle and becomes part of the plasma column, in addition to acting as the shielding gas.
In another embodiment, the aluminum weldment may be a tube having a cavity. The sulfur hexafluoride is arranged within the cavity and isolated from the arc. Sulfur hexafluoride may produce some undesirable byproducts in the presence of an arc. Having the sulfur hexafluoride contained within the cavity prevents the formation of these byproducts while still enabling the sulfur hexafluoride to pull hydrogen away from the weld area.
Therefore, an improved method and apparatus for reducing porosity in aluminum welds is provided. The method can be employed in arc welding processes that utilize shield gas, for example.
These and other features of the present invention can be best understood from the following specification and drawings, the following of which is a brief description.
The present invention and apparatus incorporates welding equipment that typically uses a shield gas to weld materials subject to formation of porosity due to hydrogen, such as aluminum and titanium. High-strength steels also benefit from reduced hydrogen during welding, since hydrogen is associated with “hydrogen embrittlement” and crack formation. The invention may be used for various types of welding equipment and processes such as gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW), gas metal arc welding (GMAW), plasma arc welding (PAW), soft plasma arc welding (SPAW), laser welding, and other arc welding processes that use shield gas. In arc welding processes, the plasma is the carrier of the electric current that heats the metal to be welded. The ionization of the shield gas in the open area between the electrode and the work piece provides the plasma.
Arc welding is a well known method of joining pieces of metal such as aluminum. The term aluminum is intended to include aluminum and its alloys. Some aluminum alloys are welded autogenously and others are welded with the addition of filler metal that may be of the same or different alloy to allow for changes in the weld geometry or physical and mechanical properties. For example, GTAW employs an arc that is struck between a non-consumable electrode and the weldment in an atmosphere of shielding gas. In PAW and SPAW, an arc is established between a non-consumable electrode and the weldment in a plasma column, which is created within the plasma torch with the plasma column and the local area of the weldment within an atmosphere of shielding gas. In GMAW, an arc is struck between a consumable electrode and the weldment in an atmosphere of shielding gas.
The present invention reduces the available hydrogen for absorption into the weld puddle by chemically binding it with constituents of a shield gas, such as sulfur hexafluoride. The inventive welding system and method is suitable for any number of welding processes such as those listed above relating to arc welding using shield gas.
Referring to
A non-consumable electrode 14 is shown in
Another example embodiment is shown in
The sulfur hexafluoride 24 is provided within the cavity sufficient to provide coverage and ensure binding is possible. The weld puddle 42 may extend through a wall 46 to an inner side 44. The sulfur hexafluoride 24 within the cavity 34 pulls the hydrogen from the weld area to form the byproducts 30. However, the sulfur hexafluoride is isolated from the arc 38 so that some of the byproducts that may be undesirable are either not formed or contained within the cavity.
Another example of an embodiment is shown in
As in the embodiment described in
Although a preferred embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.