화학공학소재연구정보센터
Plasma Chemistry and Plasma Processing, Vol.38, No.1, 177-205, 2018
Influence of Wire Initial Composition on Anode Microstructure and on Metal Transfer Mode in GMAW: Noteworthy Role of Alkali Elements
Metal Active Gas (MAG) welding in presence of Argon and CO2 mixture as shielding gas is a largely developed process allowing the transfer of the liquid metal from the consumable wire anode to the workpiece according to various modes (short-arc, globular, spray-arc). The CO2 presence in the shielding gas leads to the formation of an oxide layer, or gangue, wrapping the droplet, limiting the access to the spray-mode transfer, taking into account the low conductivity and the high viscosity of this layer. Several electrodes of various compositions have been tested thanks to Flux Cored Arc Welding, to limit the gangue formation or its negative contribution, based on Ti, La, Zr and alkali metals addition or reduction in silicon content. The results are interpreted considering the metal transfer mode for a given current intensity (330 and 410 A), with various CO2 concentrations in the shielding gas. Finally, the role of the gangue, compared to the other factors governing the droplet detachment, is discussed. A decrease in silicon content limits significantly the gangue formation and gives access to spray arc transfer up to 30 vol.% of CO2 at 330 A. Titanium addition leads to the same results. The tests in presence of zirconium proved the conductivity improvement of the gangue. The addition of alkali allows to stabilize the spray arc up to the noteworthy value of 60 vol.% of CO2 at 330 A, supporting the hypothesis of a strong influence of viscosity on droplets detachment in the process.