4.7 Article

Initiation and growth kinetics of solidification cracking during welding of steel

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/srep40255

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Funding

  1. ESPRC industrial CASE project
  2. Tata Steel UK
  3. European Commission, FP7 programme, Modelling of Interface Evolution in Advanced Welding (MintWeld) [NMP3-SL-2009-229108]

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Solidification cracking is a key phenomenon associated with defect formation during welding. To elucidate the failure mechanisms, solidification cracking during arc welding of steel are investigated in situ with high-speed, high-energy synchrotron X-ray radiography. Damage initiates at relatively low true strain of about 3.1% in the form of micro-cavities at the weld subsurface where peak volumetric strain and triaxiality are localised. The initial micro-cavities, with sizes from 10 x 10(-6) m to 27 x 10(-6) m, are mostly formed in isolation as revealed by synchrotron X-ray micro-tomography. The growth of micro-cavities is driven by increasing strain induced to the solidifying steel. Cavities grow through coalescence of micro-cavities to form micro-cracks first and then through the propagation of micro-cracks. Cracks propagate from the core of the weld towards the free surface along the solidifying grain boundaries at a speed of 2-3 x 10(-3) m s(-1).

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