Refill friction stir spot welding (RFSSW) has found several industrial applications, especially in the transportation and automotive sectors. However, modeling the RFSSW process has been tackled mainly with empirical approaches. At the same time, the key physical phenomena involved have been explained and predicted by a few numerical studies in the literature. This study uses a fully Lagrangian method, smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH), for the simulation of RFSSW. The Lagrangian particle method simulates materials undergoing large deformation, interface dynamic changes, void formations, material temperature, and strain evolution without using complex tracking schemes often required by traditional grid-basedmethods. As a relevant example, magnesium-to-steel welding simulation is presented by accounting for all the main thermo-mechanical phenomena involved. Temperature, stress, and strain field histories as well as material flow taking place during the process, are determined as characteristic aspects for qualification of RFSSW; the proposed computational approach is validated by comparing the predicted and experimentally measured welding temperature. The results obtained demonstrate that SPH is a reliable tool for welding design and process optimization and provides the information related to the involved physics needed to precisely evaluate the quality, the mechanical characteristics, and the material flow of the joined region.

Numerical study of refill friction stir spot welding of dissimilar metallic materials using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) / Khalegh Salami; Reza Abdi Behnagh; Mohsen Agha Mohammad Pour; Roberto Brighenti. - In: ACTA MECHANICA. - ISSN 0001-5970. - ELETTRONICO. - 235:(2024), pp. 6321-6339. [10.1007/s00707-024-04047-1]

Numerical study of refill friction stir spot welding of dissimilar metallic materials using smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH)

Roberto Brighenti
2024

Abstract

Refill friction stir spot welding (RFSSW) has found several industrial applications, especially in the transportation and automotive sectors. However, modeling the RFSSW process has been tackled mainly with empirical approaches. At the same time, the key physical phenomena involved have been explained and predicted by a few numerical studies in the literature. This study uses a fully Lagrangian method, smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH), for the simulation of RFSSW. The Lagrangian particle method simulates materials undergoing large deformation, interface dynamic changes, void formations, material temperature, and strain evolution without using complex tracking schemes often required by traditional grid-basedmethods. As a relevant example, magnesium-to-steel welding simulation is presented by accounting for all the main thermo-mechanical phenomena involved. Temperature, stress, and strain field histories as well as material flow taking place during the process, are determined as characteristic aspects for qualification of RFSSW; the proposed computational approach is validated by comparing the predicted and experimentally measured welding temperature. The results obtained demonstrate that SPH is a reliable tool for welding design and process optimization and provides the information related to the involved physics needed to precisely evaluate the quality, the mechanical characteristics, and the material flow of the joined region.
2024
235
6321
6339
Goal 12: Responsible consumption and production
Khalegh Salami; Reza Abdi Behnagh; Mohsen Agha Mohammad Pour; Roberto Brighenti
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1376434
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