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Mechanism of keyhole formation and stability in stationary laser welding

299

Citations

20

References

2002

Year

TLDR

The study investigates the formation and stability of stationary laser weld keyholes through numerical simulation. The authors model keyhole dynamics by numerically solving the free surface profile, flow velocity, and temperature distribution, incorporating multiple reflections via ray tracing and accounting for evaporation recoil pressure, surface tension, and hydrostatic pressure. The simulation reveals a transition mode between conduction and keyhole regimes, and at powers of 500 W or higher, wall protrusions caused by opposing flow collisions collapse the keyhole and form voids, with Marangoni flow playing a minor role.

Abstract

The formation and stability of stationary laser weld keyholes are investigated using a numerical simulation. The effect of multiple reflections in the keyhole is estimated using the ray tracing method, and the free surface profile, flow velocity and temperature distribution are calculated numerically. In the simulation, the keyhole is formed by the displacement of the melt induced by evaporation recoil pressure, while surface tension and hydrostatic pressure oppose cavity formation. A transition mode having the geometry of the conduction mode with keyhole formation occurs between the conduction and keyhole modes. At laser powers of 500 W and greater, the protrusion occurs on the keyhole wall, which results in keyhole collapse and void formation at the bottom. Initiation of the protrusion is caused mainly by collision of upward and downward flows due to the pressure components, and Marangoni flow has minor effects on the flow patterns and keyhole stability.

References

YearCitations

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