4.7 Article

Numerical study of thermal fluid dynamics and solidification characteristics during continuous wave and pulsed wave laser welding

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THERMAL SCIENCES
Volume 181, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijthermalsci.2022.107778

Keywords

Laser welding; Pulsed wave; Keyhole; Molten pool; Solidification characteristics

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52105328]
  2. China Post- doctoral Science Foundation [2021M700990]
  3. Hei- longjiang Provincial Postdoctoral Science Foundation [LBH-Z20143]
  4. Heilongjiang Provincial Key Program of Engineering Science and Technology [2020ZX03A01]

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In this study, a thermal fluid model considering both CW and PW modes laser welding is developed. The model is validated against experimental results and shows good agreement. The results indicate that PW mode exhibits higher depth of penetration, smaller molten pool, and finer microstructure compared to CW mode.
Pulsed wave (PW) mode laser welding is often preferred under conditions where specific heat input and tail-orable cooling rate are required. Previous works on numerical modelling of laser welding mainly focus on continuous wave (CW) mode, while physical understanding of PW mode from numerical investigation is scarce. In this work, a 3D multi-physics thermal fluid model is developed considering both CW and PW modes laser welding. The main physical factors involving heat transfer, thermal fluid flow, Fresnel absorption, recoil pressure induced by metal evaporation, Marangoni effect driven by surface tension, free surface tracing, and laser mul-tiple reflections inside the keyhole are included in this model. The model is tested and validated against the corresponding experimental results for laser welds of stainless steel 316 L. The simulated weld fusion cross sections and surface molten pool agree well with the experimentally observed results for both CW and PW modes. The results show that PW mode exhibits a higher depth of penetration and a smaller molten pool at the same heat input with CW mode. In CW mode laser welding, the shape of keyhole is unstable, while its depth keeps relatively stable. There are two main flow patterns in the molten pool of CW mode welding: an outward flow from keyhole outlet to the rear weld pool and a clockwise flow from the keyhole tip to the rear weld pool. While for PW mode, keyhole and molten pool show periodic behaviors with a period of the laser energy output used. The periodic fluid flow pattern is mainly affected by the gradually changed surface tension and suddenly changed recoil pressure. Furthermore, it is found that a finer microstructure with a smaller secondary dendrite arm spacing is obtained in PW mode due to a higher cooling rate from both the calculated and experimentally measured results.

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