A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Numerical simulation of linear friction welding of titanium alloy: Effects of processing parameters
AbstractNumerical modeling of linear friction welding (LFW) of TC4 titanium alloy was conducted using ABAQUS/Explicit with a 2D model. The coupled thermo-mechanical analysis was performed with the Johnson–Cook material model. The effects of processing parameters on the temperature evolution and axial shortening of LFW joints were numerically investigated. It is shown that the temperature at the interface can first increase quickly to about 1000°C within 1s, then increases slowly, and finally tends to become uniform across the interface under certain processing conditions. The temperature gradient across the joint from the interface is very high during the friction process. Consequently, significant axial shortening and fast formation of flash start to happen as the interface temperature becomes more uniform. During cooling, the interface temperature decreases steeply at a rate of several hundred degrees per second because of the fast heat conduction to the cold end of the specimen. The temperature distribution appears to be uniform in the joint after about 30s. At a higher oscillation frequency, the interface temperature rises more quickly and the axial dimension shortens more and at a faster rate. The same phenomena are observed for the amplitude and friction pressure. The effects of these three factors can be integrated into one parameter of heat input. The axial shortening increases with increasing heat input almost linearly as the heat input exceeds a critical value.
Numerical simulation of linear friction welding of titanium alloy: Effects of processing parameters
AbstractNumerical modeling of linear friction welding (LFW) of TC4 titanium alloy was conducted using ABAQUS/Explicit with a 2D model. The coupled thermo-mechanical analysis was performed with the Johnson–Cook material model. The effects of processing parameters on the temperature evolution and axial shortening of LFW joints were numerically investigated. It is shown that the temperature at the interface can first increase quickly to about 1000°C within 1s, then increases slowly, and finally tends to become uniform across the interface under certain processing conditions. The temperature gradient across the joint from the interface is very high during the friction process. Consequently, significant axial shortening and fast formation of flash start to happen as the interface temperature becomes more uniform. During cooling, the interface temperature decreases steeply at a rate of several hundred degrees per second because of the fast heat conduction to the cold end of the specimen. The temperature distribution appears to be uniform in the joint after about 30s. At a higher oscillation frequency, the interface temperature rises more quickly and the axial dimension shortens more and at a faster rate. The same phenomena are observed for the amplitude and friction pressure. The effects of these three factors can be integrated into one parameter of heat input. The axial shortening increases with increasing heat input almost linearly as the heat input exceeds a critical value.
Numerical simulation of linear friction welding of titanium alloy: Effects of processing parameters
Li, Wen-Ya (author) / Ma, Tiejun (author) / Li, Jinglong (author)
2009-08-15
11 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Numerical simulation of linear friction welding of titanium alloy: Effects of processing parameters
British Library Online Contents | 2010
|High frequency linear friction welding of a titanium alloy
British Library Online Contents | 1998
|Linear Friction Welding of a Forged Near- alpha Titanium Alloy
British Library Online Contents | 2012
|Numerical Simulation and Experiment of Linear Friction Welding Process of Ti6Al4V Alloy
British Library Online Contents | 2011
|Microstructural evolution of a TC11 titanium alloy during linear friction welding
British Library Online Contents | 2010
|