Hot cracking susceptibility and the formation of brittle martensite phase are the main factors that limit the weldability of a dissimilar joint between carbon steel (CS) and austenitic stainless steel (SS). In this study, the self-constraint finger test was used to correlate the welding thermo-mechanical field with the crack susceptibility of a dissimilar weld between the CS ASTM A36 and SS AISI 304L. The finger test allowed to intercalate fingers (portions) of tested materials in the weld samples to produce dissimilar welds. The heat dissipation and the distortion behavior were related to the crack susceptibility, critical weld regions extension and chemical species diffusion. Four samples were welded (two similar welds and two dissimilar welds) using the filler metals ER70S-6 and EC410NiMo. Welds were analyzed through light optical microscopy (LOM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to characterize phases, detect cracks, microstructural changes and element diffusion. A finite element (FE) numerical model was applied to simulate the welding thermo-mechanical field. Additionally, electrochemical tests were carried out to assess the corrosion susceptibility of the dissimilar welds. The observed cracks were produced due to different factors such as residual stress distribution, the formation of brittle and untempered martensitic phase in the fusion zone (FZ) and hot cracking associated with the weld sample distortion behavior. The dilution contributed to the formation of d-ferrite in the FZ, which limited the growth of cold and hot cracks. The decarburization and sensitization were not observed in dissimilar welds due to the low element diffusion.
Hot cracking susceptibility and the formation of brittle martensite phase are the main factors that limit the weldability of a dissimilar joint between carbon steel (CS) and austenitic stainless steel (SS). In this study, the self-constraint finger test was used to correlate the welding thermo-mechanical field with the crack susceptibility of a dissimilar weld between the CS ASTM A36 and SS AISI 304L. The finger test allowed to intercalate fingers (portions) of tested materials in the weld samples to produce dissimilar welds. The heat dissipation and the distortion behavior were related to the crack susceptibility, critical weld regions extension and chemical species diffusion. Four samples were welded (two similar welds and two dissimilar welds) using the filler metals ER70S-6 and EC410NiMo. Welds were analyzed through light optical microscopy (LOM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to characterize phases, detect cracks, microstructural changes and element diffusion. A finite element (FE) numerical model was applied to simulate the welding thermo-mechanical field.Additionally, electrochemical tests were carried out to assess the corrosion susceptibility of the dissimilar welds. The observed cracks were produced due to different factors such as residual stress distribution, the formation of brittle and untempered martensitic phase in the fusion zone (FZ) and hot cracking associated with the weld sample distortion behavior. The dilution contributed to the formation of -ferrite in the FZ, which limited the growth of cold and hot cracks. The decarburization and sensitization were not observed in dissimilar welds due to the low element diffusion.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.