4.7 Article

Modified friction stir clinching of 2024-T3 to 6061-T6 aluminium alloy: Effect of dwell time and precipitation-hardening heat treatment

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2020.139734

Keywords

Modified friction stir clinching; Mechanical properties; Microstructure; Fracture; Dwell time; Heat treatment; Aluminum alloys; AA2024-T3; AA6061-T6

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This paper investigates the effect of dwell time and heat treatment on the modified friction stir clinched (MFSC) joint of AA2024-T3/AA6061-T6 Al alloys. The precipitation-hardening heat treatment method involves the combination of solution heat treatment (at 520 degrees C for 1 h) and aging (at 165 degrees C for 18 h) processes. The microstructure, failure load, hardness, and fracture behavior of the as-welded and heat-treated MFSC joints were investigated. TEM images show that re-precipitation of strengthening Al2CuMg and MgZn2 phases, dislocation density, and tangles are more pronounced in the heat-treated MFSC joint. A rise in dwell time increases the average grain sizes (1.39-6.65 mu m), tensile-shear strength (101-133 MPa), and cross tension strength (59-88 MPa) of the MFSC welded 2024-T3/6061-T6 joints due to an upsurge in the in-process exposure time-induced heat input and inter-material flow. An increase in dwell time beyond 15 s is undesirable. It induces the formation of nugget cracks and micro-voids in the joints and an impaired joint failure load consequently ensues. Heat treatment processing further causes grain coarsening (2.48-9.15 mu m) and improves the hardness (at the weld center), tensile-shear (146 MPa), and cross tension (102 MPa) failure strengths of the MFSC joints due to the re-precipitated strengthening phases.

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