4.7 Article

Mathematical modelling for energy efficiency improvement in laser welding

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 322, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2021.129012

Keywords

Low carbon; Resource efficiency; Energy modelling; System complexity; Industrial sustainability

Funding

  1. EPSRC [EP/S018190/1]
  2. EPSRC [EP/S018190/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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In the global manufacturing industry, there is a growing recognition of the importance of improving energy efficiency and reducing costs and carbon footprint. The research on laser welding has primarily focused on lasermaterial interaction, but this study systematically investigates the energy requirements of the process, creating a mathematical model to analyze the electrical demand. The study shows a strong correlation between process rate and specific energy consumption, highlighting the importance of parameter selection in achieving energy savings without compromising quality.
Within the global manufacturing industry, there is increasing recognition of the need to improve energy efficiency, to reduce both costs and carbon footprint. Significant work has sought to improve the energy efficiency of a variety of different processes, but in the case of laser welding, research has primarily focussed on the lasermaterial interaction and not on energy rationalisation. This work addresses this knowledge gap by methodically investigating and analysing the energy requirements of a laser welding process. In this study, a mathematical model has been created in order to take a whole-system approach to laser welding electrical demand, accounting for all component sub-systems of the laser cell. This model was then experimentally tested via use of an electrical energy monitor to gather energy data for an autogenous welding process carried out on 316L stainless steel at a variety of parameters. Mathematical analysis of this data was then used to create a matrix of electrical power draws at different test conditions, which was further developed into an analysis of process productivity. This revealed a very strong non-linear inverse correlation between process rate (kg/hr) and specific energy consumption (J/kg). This process productivity measurement was placed in context with other manufacturing processes, revealing that laser welding has a relatively high process rate (1E-02 - 1E0 kg/hr), and relatively low energy consumption (1E+08 and 1E+09 J/kg) in comparison. A further benefit of this model is that it allows the selection of processing parameters according to their energy demand. Energy flow analysis allows the direct comparison of the energy demand of different sets of processing parameters, which metallurgical analysis shows produce similar welds. In this study, it was shown that parameter selection alone was capable of producing an electrical energy saving of 60% for a given weld. This emphasises the importance of parameter selection and control in enabling environmentally cleaner manufacturing without compromising part quality or the need for investment in capital equipment.

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