
Effect of Coating and Welding Wire Composition on AHSS GMA Welds
Author(s) -
Abdelbaset R.H. Midawi,
AUTHOR_ID,
E. Biro,
SRINATH KISTAMPALLY
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
welding journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.27
H-Index - 71
eISSN - 2689-0445
pISSN - 0043-2296
DOI - 10.29391/2021.100.035
Subject(s) - materials science , weldability , welding , metallurgy , galvanization , composite material , ultimate tensile strength , butt joint , lap joint , butt welding , coating , layer (electronics)
Advanced high-strength steels (AHSS) such as complexphase (CP) and high-formability (HF) steel offer weightsaving advantages for automotive applications such as chassis and frame applications. To prevent material oxidation, materials are often galvanized to protect the substrate from corrosion. However, the weldability of coated AHSS becomes challenging due to the trapping of zinc in the weld molten pool, which could lead to weld defects such as porosity and liquid metal embrittlement cracks. This work focused on the weldability of AHSS (CP800 and 980HF) using the gas metal arc welding process. The roles of both galvanized iron coating and filler material on weld strength were investigated. The welds were performed using two different filler materials: a low-strength filler (ER70S-6) and a high-strength filler (ER100S-6) material. In addition, two different joint configurations were studied: lap joints and butt joints. The results showed that the butt joint had a higher strength compared to the lap joints. Furthermore, the strength of the butt joint overmatched the base material strength in all of the tested materials (both in galvanized and uncoated). In general, lap joint strength undermatched the base material strength, which was attributed to the rotation during tensile testing that induced unaccounted bending stress on the lap joint, while using a higherstrength welding wire improved the tensile strength material in the lap joint configuration. The hardness profiles in the 980HF steel also showed a significant hardness mismatch due to the formation of a fully martensitic microstructure in the heat-affected zone, which led to suppressing the deformation across the lap joint.