Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7176456 | Journal of Materials Processing Technology | 2018 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Decreasing the impact speed can extend the effective heating time and escalate the heating rate. Additional flash is generated near the NiTi/SS interface due to the lengthening of the effective heating time. With decreasing impact speed, the plastic deformation zone of the SS is enlarged, and the microstructure in the heat-affected zone (HAZ) is increasingly coarsened, but those of NiTi demonstrate the opposite trends. In all of the NiTi/SS joints, the weld consists of a diffusion layer with a thickness that increases slightly from 1â¯Î¼m to 1.7â¯Î¼m as the impact speed decreases from 40â¯mm/s to 27.5â¯mm/s. The mechanical properties of the joint deteriorate with decreasing impact speed due to the increased remnant of semi-molten NiTi at the interface. The joint welded at an impact speed of 40â¯mm/s has the highest strength of 522â¯Â±â¯41MPa with (7â¯Â±â¯2)% rupture elongation, and it fractures via micro-void coalescence.
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Authors
Qiao Li, Yuanxiang Zhu,