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Lecture 05: Welded connections By: Prof Dr. Akhtar Naeem Khan chairciv_at_nwfpuet.edu.pk * The direct shear acts as shear for the weld along the length. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: By: Prof Dr. Akhtar Naeem Khan


1
Lecture 05 Welded connections
  • By Prof Dr. Akhtar Naeem Khan
  • chairciv_at_nwfpuet.edu.pk

2
Topics to be Addressed
  • Welding
  • Types of welds
  • Welded Joints
  • Welding processes
  • Nomenclature of welds
  • Welding symbols

3
Topics to be Addressed
  • Stresses in Welds
  • Specifications for Welds
  • Code Requirements
  • Design Examples

4
Welding
  • It is a process of joining parts by means of heat
    pressure, causes fusion of parts.
  • OR
  • Heating metal to fusion temperature with or
    without addition of weld metals.
  • Code specification American Welding Society
    (AWS)

5
Types of Welds
  • Welds are classified according to their shape and
    method of deposition into
  • Groove Weld
  • Fillet Weld
  • Plug Weld
  • Slot Weld

6
Types of Welds
  1. Groove Weld is made in opening between two parts
    being joined.

7
Types of Welds
  • Fillet Weld triangular in shape, joins surfaces
    which are at an angle with one another.

8
Types of Welds
Groove Weld and Fillet Weld
  • Groove welds are more efficient than fillet
    welds.
  • Have greater resistance to repeated stress and
    Impact loaded. Hence preferable for dynamically
    loaded members.
  • Groove welds require less weld metal than fillet
    weld of equal strength.
  • But fillet welds are often used in structural
    work. WHY ?

9
Types of Welds
Groove Weld and Fillet Weld
  • But fillet welds are often used in structural
    work WHY ?
  • Partly because many connections are more easily
    made with fillet welds and
  • Partly because groove welds require the member of
    structure to be cut to rather close tolerances.

10
Types of Welds
  1. Plug Weld is made by depositing weld metal in a
    circular hole in one of two lapped places.

11
Types of Welds
  • Slot Weld similar to plug but the hole is
    elongated.

12
Types of Welds
Groove weld
Fillet weld
Plug weld
Slot weld
13
Types of Welds
  • Welds are classified according to the position of
    weld during welding as
  • Flat
  • Horizontal
  • Vertical
  • Overhead

14
Types of Welds
  • Flat Executed from above, the weld face
    approximately horizontal.

15
Types of Welds
  • Horizontal Similar to Flat weld but weld is
    harder to make.

16
Types of Welds
  • Vertical Longitudinal axis of weld is vertical.

17
Types of Welds
  • Overhead Welding is done from underside of the
    joint.

18
Types of Welds
19
Welded Joints
  • They are classified as
  • Butt Joint is groove-welded
  1. Lap Joint is fillet-welded

20
Welded Joints
  1. Tee Joint can be fillet-welded or groove-welded
  1. Corner Joint

21
Welding processes
  • There are three methods of Welding
  • Forge welding
  • Resistance welding
  • Fusion welding

22
Welding processes
  • Forge welding
  • It consists of simply heating the pieces above
    certain temperature and hammering them together

23
Welding processes
  • Resistance welding
  • Metal parts are joined by means of heat and
    pressure which causes fusion of parts.
  • Heat is generated by electrical resistance to a
    current of high amperage low voltage passing
    through small area of contact between parts to be
    connected.

24
Welding processes
  • Fusion welding
  • Metal is heated to fusion temperature with or
    without addition of weld metal
  • Method of connecting pieces by molten metal
  • Oxyacetylene welding
  • Electric arc welding

25
Welding processes
Metal Arc Welding
  • Arc is a sustained spark between a metallic
    electrode and work to be welded.
  • At the instant arc is formed the temperature of
    work and tip of electrode are brought to melting
    point.
  • As the tip of electrode melts, tiny globules of
    molten metal form.

26
Welding processes
Metal Arc Welding
  • The molten metal, when exposed to air combines
    chemically with oxygen nitrogen forming oxides
    nitrides, which tend to embrittle it less
    corrosive resistant.
  • Tough, ductile weld are produced if molten pool
    is shielded by an inert gas, which envelops
    molten metal tip of electrode.

27
Welding processes
Metal Arc Welding
28
Shielded Metal Arc Welding (SMAW)
Welding processes
  • When an arc is struck between the metal rod
    (electrode) and the work piece, both the rod and
    work piece surface melt to form a weld pool.
  • Simultaneous melting of the flux coating on the
    rod will form gas and slag which protects the
    weld pool from the surrounding atmosphere.

29
Shielded Metal Arc Welding (SMAW)
Welding processes
30
Submerged Arc Welding (SAW)
Welding processes
  • A bare wire is fed through welding head at a rate
    to maintain constant arc length.
  • Welding is shielded by blanket of granular
    fusible material fed onto the work area by
    gravity, in an amount sufficient to submerge the
    arc completely.
  • In addition to protecting weld from atmosphere,
    the covering aids in controlling rate of cooling
    of weld.

31
Submerged Arc Welding (SAW)
Welding processes
32
Flux Cored Arc Welding (FCAW)
Welding processes
  • It utilizes the heat of an arc between a
    continuously fed consumable flux cored electrode
    and the work.
  • The heat of the arc melts the surface of the base
    metal and the end of the electrode.
  • The metal melted off the electrode is transferred
    across the arc to the work piece, where it
    becomes the deposited weld metal.
  • Shielding is obtained from the disintegration of
    ingredients contained within the flux cored
    electrode.

33
Flux Cored Arc Welding (FCAW)
Welding processes
34
Metal-Arc Inert Gas (MIG) Welding
Welding processes
  • MIG Welding refers to the wire that is used to
    start the arc.
  • It is shielded by inert gas and the feeding wire
    also acts as the filler rod.

35
Metal-Arc Inert Gas (MIG) Welding
Welding processes
36
Tungsten-Arc Inert Gas (TIG) Welding
Welding processes
  • The arc is started with a tungsten electrode
    shielded by inert gas and filler rod is fed into
    the weld puddle separately.
  • The gas shielding that is required to protect the
    molten metal from contamination is supplied
    through the torch.

37
Tungsten-Arc Inert Gas (TIG) Welding
Welding processes
38
Important considerations
Welding processes
  • Large fillet welds made manually require two or
    more passes.
  • Each pass must cool, and slag must be removed
    before next pass.
  • Most efficient fillet welds are those which can
    be made in one pass.

39
Important considerations
Welding processes
  • Largest size can be made in one pass depends upon
    welding position should not exceed the
    following.
  • 5/16 Horizontal or overhead
  • 3/8 Flat position
  • 1/2 Vertical position
  • Thickness of weld Thickness of material 1/16

40
Important considerations
Welding processes
  • A fillet weld that is too small compared with the
    thickness of the material being welded is
    affected adversely during cooling.
  • The amount of heat required to deposit a small
    weld is not sufficient to produce appreciable
    expansion of the thick material, and as hotter
    weld contracts during cooling it is restrained by
    being attached to the cooler material and tensile
    stresses produce, may cause crack of the weld.

41
Nomenclature of Welds
  • The part of weld assumed to be effective in
    transferring stress is Throat.
  • The faces of weld in contact with the parts
    joined is called its Legs..
  • For equal-legged fillet weld throat is 0.707s,
    where s is leg size.

42
Standard Welding symbols
Fillet Weld
43
Standard Welding symbols
Fillet Weld
44
Standard Welding symbols
Fillet Weld
45
Standard Welding symbols
Fillet Weld
46
Standard Welding smbols
Fillet Weld
Unequal legs
47
Standard Welding symbols
Groove Weld
48
Standard Welding symbols
Groove Weld
49
Standard Welding symbols
Groove Weld
50
Standard Welding symbols
Plug Slot Weld
51
Stresses In Welds
  • Groove weld may be stressed in tension,
    compression, shear, or a combination of tension,
    compression and shear, depending upon the
    direction and position of load relative to weld.

52
Stresses In Welds
  • f P / (LTe)

53
Stresses In Welds
  • The load P in Fig is resisted by shearing force
    P/2, on the throat of each fillet weld. f (P
    /2) / (LTe)

54
Stresses In Welds
  • It is customary to take the force on a fillet
    weld as a shear on the throat irrespective of the
    direction of load relative to throat.

P ?2 / 4
55
Stresses In Welds
  • Tests have shown that a fillet weld transverse to
    the load is much stronger than a fillet weld of
    same size parallel to the load.

56
Stresses In Welds
  • Load sharing of P, between two longitudinal
    fillet one transverse fillet weld depends
    either on
  • Proportional to their length if welds are of same
    size.
  • Proportional to the area for different size weld.

57
Stresses In Welds
  • Any abrupt discontinuity or change in section of
    member such as notch or a sharp reentrant corner,
    interrupts the transmission of stress along
    smooth lines.
  • Joint is elongated in direction of load to
    produce a more uniform transfer of stress
  • These concentrations are of no consequence for
    static loads, but they are significant where
    fatigue is involved.

58
Specifications for Welded Connections
  • Welding electrodes are classified on the basis of
    mechanical properties of weld metal, Welding
    position, type of coating, and type of Current
    required.
  • Each electrode is identified by code number
    EXXXXX.
  • E stands for Electrode and each X represents
    number.

59
Specifications for Welded Connections
  • First two or three numbers denote the tensile
    strength in Ksi.
  • Next No. position in which electrode can be used.
  • e.g. 1 all positions, 2 flat horizontal
    fillet welds, 3 flat welding only
  • Last No. denotes type of covering, type of
    current polarity.

60
Specifications for Welded Connections
  • Example E7018 means
  • Tensile strength 70 Ksi
  • 1 means can be used in all positions
  • 8 means it is iron-powder, low-hydrogen electrode
    used with A.C or D.C but only in reverse polarity.

61
Code Requirements
  • AISC/ASD
  • Allowable stress in welded connection is given in
    Table 2-21
  • AISC/LRFD
  • Design strengths of welds are given in Table
    2-22 with resistance factor ?.

62
Code Requirements
  • AASHTO
  • Allowable stress are more conservative than AISC.
    e.g. 0.27Fu for fillet weld, Fu is tensile
    strength of electrode but not less than tensile
    strength of connected part.
  • AREA
  • Allowable shear stress on fillet welds are given
    as function of base material and strength of weld
    metal. e.g.
  • A36. Electrode or electrode-flux combinations
    with
  • 60,000 psi tensile strength 16,500 psi
  • 70,000 psi tensile strength 19,500 psi

63
Code Requirements
64
Code Requirements
65
Code Requirements
66
Code Requirements
67
Code Requirements
68
Design Problem
69
Example Problem 1 - ASD
70
Example Problem 1 - ASD
71
Example Problem 1 - ASD
Final Design
72
Example Problem 1 - ASD
73
Example Problem 2 LRFD
74
Example Problem 2 LRFD
75
Example Problem 2 LRFD
76
Example Problem 2 LRFD
77
Example Problem 3 LRFD
78
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79
Example Problem 3 LRFD
80
Example Problem 3 LRFD
81
Example Problem 3 LRFD
82
Example Problem 3 LRFD
83
Example Problem 3 LRFD
Final Design
84
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