4.6 Article

The small-size laser shock adhesive-clinching of Al foils

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY
Volume 122, Issue 9-10, Pages 3837-3848

Publisher

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s00170-022-10123-4

Keywords

Laser shock forming; Laser shock adhesive-clinching; FEM simulation; Joint strength; Failure analysis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52075298, 51575314, 51801031, 52075299]
  2. Fund of the State Key Laboratory of Solidification Processing in NPU [SKLSP202014]

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Laser shock adhesive-clinching (LSAC) is an original material joining technique that combines clinching and laser shock clinching. This paper analyzes the LSAC process and the deformation of LSAC joints under shear loads, and investigates the effect of adhesive on LSAC joint manufacturing.
The laser shock adhesive-clinching (LSAC) is an original material joining technique that combines the advantages of clinch-bonded hybrid joining and laser shock clinching, in which two metal foils are bonded by adhesive and clinched by laser shock simultaneously. In this paper, the LSAC joints are manufactured by 1060 Al foils, Henkel EP 5055 adhesive, and perforated 304 stainless steel sheets. Through experiments and FEM simulations, the LSAC process and the deformation of LSAC joints under shear loads are analyzed, and the effect of adhesive on LSAC joint manufacturing is investigated. The results show that bulging is the dominant deformation behavior during LASC, and the cured adhesive with thin thickness is beneficial to the subsequent clinching process. The shear strength of the LSAC joint is greatly enhanced compared to the pure clinched and pure bonded joints. The shear failure process of the LSAC joint is adhesive degumming first, then the interlock separating.

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