4.7 Article

Influence of laser welding power on steel/CFRP lap joint fracture behaviors

Journal

COMPOSITE STRUCTURES
Volume 285, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.compstruct.2022.115247

Keywords

Laser welding; Steel; CFRP; Numerical simulation; Fracture behavior; Bonding mechanism

Funding

  1. Amada Foundation [AF-2021239-C2]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52105405, 52005132]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Advanced Welding and Joining, Harbin Institute of Technology [AWJ-022M04]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021M702423]
  5. Natural Science Foundation for Excellent Young Scholars of Shandong Province [ZR2021YQ30]

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In this study, DP590 steel and CFRP were successfully joined by laser welding, and experiments and simulations were conducted to investigate the influence of laser power on the joint characteristics, bonding mechanism, and fracture behavior. The results showed that the melting width and depth of CFRP increased with increasing laser power. Different fracture modes were observed at different laser powers, and chemical bonds formed at the interface were beneficial for improving fracture load.
Dual-phase steel DP590 and carbon fibre reinforced polymer (CFRP) were successfully joined by laser welding. Experiments and numerical simulations were performed to clarify the influence of laser power on the joint characteristic, bonding mechanism and fracture behavior. The results indicate that the melting width and depth of CFRP increased with the enhancement of laser power. With relatively low laser power, un-bonded steel/CFRP interface was formed due to the insufficient melting of resin matrix and interfacial residual stress resulted from thermal expansion mismatch between steel and CFRP. Compact-bonding was produced with the laser power range of 400-700 W. Decomposition of CFRP at the interface occurred with the further increase of laser power to 800 W due to excessively high peak temperature. The highest tensile-shear peak load of 3855 N was produced at 700 W laser power. Three different fracture modes were found in the joints with different laser powers, i.e., interfacial fracture (IF) at 300 W and 400 W, cohesion fracture (CF) in CFRP at 500 W and 600 W, and interface fracture at inner region together with cohesion fracture at outer region of the bonding interface (IF + CF) at 700 W and 800 W. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy results showed that C-M and O-M chemical bonds were formed at the interface due to the reaction between resin matrix and DP590. Stronger O-M and C-M chemical bonds produced at higher laser power were beneficial for the improvement of fracture load.

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