Title: Stainless Steel
1Stainless Steel
High Ni Cr Content Low (Controlled)
Interstitials
Nitrogen Strengthened Austenitic
Austenitic
Martensitic
Ferritic
Super Austenitic
Precipitation Hardened
Duplex
Super Ferritic
2Resistance Welding
- Learning Activities
- View Slides
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- Do on-line workbook
- Lesson Objectives
- When you finish this lesson you will understand
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Keywords
3AOD Furnace
Argon Oxygen
Today, more than 1/2 of the high chromium steels
are produced in the AOD Furnace
Linnert, Welding Metallurgy AWS, 1994
4AMartensitic Alloys BSemi-Ferritic CFerritic
Castro Cadenet, Welding Metallurgy of
Stainless and Heat-resisting Steels Cambridge
University Press, 1974
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6We will look at these properties in next slide!
AWS Welding Handbook
7General Properties of Stainless Steels
- Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Greater coefficient than plain-carbon steels
- High Strength
- Exhibit high strength at room and elevated
temperatures - Surface Preparation
- Surface films must be removed prior to welding
- Spot Spacing
- Less shunting is observed than plain-carbon steels
- Electrical Resistivity
- Surface bulk resistance is higher than that for
plain-carbon steels - Thermal Conductivity
- About 40 to 50 percent that of plain-carbon steel
- Melting Temperature
- Plain-carbon1480-1540 C
- Martensitic 1400-1530 C
- Ferritic 1400-1530 C
- Austenitic 1370-1450 C
8Static Resistance Comparison
Plain-carbon Steel
Electrode Electrode
Stainless Steel
Higher Bulk Resistance Alloy Effect
Workpieces
Higher Surface Resistance Chromium Oxide
Class 3 Electrode Higher Resistance
Resistance
Higher Resistances Lower Currents Required
9General Properties of Stainless Steels
- Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Greater coefficient than plain-carbon steels
- High Strength
- Exhibit high strength at room and elevated
temperatures - Surface Preparation
- Surface films must be removed prior to welding
- Spot Spacing
- Less shunting is observed than plain-carbon steels
- Electrical Resistivity
- Surface bulk resistance is higher than that for
plain-carbon steels - Thermal Conductivity
- About 40 to 50 percent that of plain-carbon steel
- Melting Temperature
- Plain-carbon1480-1540 C
- Martensitic 1400-1530 C
- Ferritic 1400-1530 C
- Austenitic 1370-1450 C
10Conduction in Plain Carbon
Conduction in SS
Base Metal Base Metal
Weld Nugget
Only 40 - 50 Heat conduction in SS Less Heat
Conducted Away Therefore Lower Current
Required Less Time Required (in some cases less
than 1/3)
11General Properties of Stainless Steels
- Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Greater coefficient than plain-carbon steels
- High Strength
- Exhibit high strength at room and elevated
temperatures - Surface Preparation
- Surface films must be removed prior to welding
- Spot Spacing
- Less shunting is observed than plain-carbon steels
- Electrical Resistivity
- Surface bulk resistance is higher than that for
plain-carbon steels - Thermal Conductivity
- About 40 to 50 percent that of plain-carbon steel
- Melting Temperature
- Plain-carbon1480-1540 C
- Martensitic 1400-1530 C
- Ferritic 1400-1530 C
- Austenitic 1370-1450 C
12Melting Temp of Plain Carbon
Base Metal Base Metal
Weld Nugget
Melting Temp of SS
Melting Temp of SS is lower Nugget Penetrates
More Therefore Less Current and Shorter Time
Required
13General Properties of Stainless Steels
- Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Greater coefficient than plain-carbon steels
- High Strength
- Exhibit high strength at room and elevated
temperatures - Surface Preparation
- Surface films must be removed prior to welding
- Spot Spacing
- Less shunting is observed than plain-carbon steels
- Electrical Resistivity
- Surface bulk resistance is higher than that for
plain-carbon steels - Thermal Conductivity
- About 40 to 50 percent that of plain-carbon steel
- Melting Temperature
- Plain-carbon1480-1540 C
- Martensitic 1400-1530 C
- Ferritic 1400-1530 C
- Austenitic 1370-1450 C
14Ferritic, Martensitic, Ppt. 6 - 11 greater
expansion Austenitic 15 greater expansion than
Plain Carbon Steel Therefore Warpage occurs
especially in Seam Welding Hot Cracking can Occur
Dong et al, Finite Element Modeling of Electrode
Wear Mechanisms, Auto Steel Partnership, April
10, 1995
15General Properties of Stainless Steels
- Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Greater coefficient than plain-carbon steels
- High Strength
- Exhibit high strength at room and elevated
temperatures - Surface Preparation
- Surface films must be removed prior to welding
- Spot Spacing
- Less shunting is observed than plain-carbon steels
- Electrical Resistivity
- Surface bulk resistance is higher than that for
plain-carbon steels - Thermal Conductivity
- About 40 to 50 percent that of plain-carbon steel
- Melting Temperature
- Plain-carbon1480-1540 C
- Martensitic 1400-1530 C
- Ferritic 1400-1530 C
- Austenitic 1370-1450 C
16Force
High Strength High Hot Strength
- Need Higher Electrode Forces
- Need Stronger Electrodes (Class 3, 10 14
Sometimes Used)
17General Properties of Stainless Steels
- Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Greater coefficient than plain-carbon steels
- High Strength
- Exhibit high strength at room and elevated
temperatures - Surface Preparation
- Surface films must be removed prior to welding
- Spot Spacing
- Less shunting is observed than plain-carbon steels
- Electrical Resistivity
- Surface bulk resistance is higher than that for
plain-carbon steels - Thermal Conductivity
- About 40 to 50 percent that of plain-carbon steel
- Melting Temperature
- Plain-carbon1480-1540 C
- Martensitic 1400-1530 C
- Ferritic 1400-1530 C
- Austenitic 1370-1450 C
18Oxide from Hot Rolling
Oxide Protective Film
- Chromium Oxide from Hot Rolling must be removed
by Pickle - Ordinary Oxide Protective Film is not a Problem
19General Properties of Stainless Steels
- Coefficient of Thermal Expansion
- Greater coefficient than plain-carbon steels
- High Strength
- Exhibit high strength at room and elevated
temperatures - Surface Preparation
- Surface films must be removed prior to welding
- Spot Spacing
- Less shunting is observed than plain-carbon steels
- Electrical Resistivity
- Surface bulk resistance is higher than that for
plain-carbon steels - Thermal Conductivity
- About 40 to 50 percent that of plain-carbon steel
- Melting Temperature
- Plain-carbon1480-1540 C
- Martensitic 1400-1530 C
- Ferritic 1400-1530 C
- Austenitic 1370-1450 C
20Look at Each Grade Its Weldability
Austenitic
Super Austenitic
Nitrogen Strengthened Austenitic
Martensitic
Ferritic
Super Ferritic
Precipitation Hardened
Duplex
21- Austenitic
- Contain between 16 and 25 percent chromium, plus
sufficient amount of nickel, manganese and/or
nitrogen - Have a face-centered-cubic (fcc) structure
- Nonmagnetic
- Good toughness
- Spot weldable
- Strengthening can be accomplished by cold work
or by solid-solution strengthening
Applications Fire Extinguishers, pots pans,
etc.
22AWS Welding Handbook
23AWS Welding Handbook
24Pseudobinary Phase Diagram _at_ 70 Iron
AWS Welding Handbook
25Prediction of Weld Metal Solidification Morphology
Schaeffler Diagram
WRC Diagram
AWS Welding Handbook
26Hot Cracking
PS
A few Ferrite Reduces Cracks But PS Increase
Cracks
AWS Welding Handbook
27Spot Welding Austenitic Stainless Steel
- Some Solidification Porosity Can Occur
- As a result of this tendency to Hot Crack when
Proper - Percent Ferrite is not Obtained
- Because of higher Contraction on Cooling
- Suggestions
- Maintain Electrode Force until Cooled
- Limit Nugget Diameter to lt4 X Thickness of
thinner piece - More small diameter spots preferred to fewer
Large Spots
28Spot Welding Austenitic Stainless Steel
Some Discoloration May Occur Around Spot Weld
Oxide Formation in HAZ
Nugget
- Solutions
- Maintain Electrode Force until weld cooled below
oxidizing Temperature - Post weld clean with 10 Nitric, 2 Hydrofluoric
Acid (Hydrochloric acid should be avoided due to
chloride ion stress-corrosion cracking and
pitting)
29Seam Welding Austenitic Stainless Steel
Somewhat more Distortion Noted Because of Higher
Thermal Contraction
- Solution
- Abundant water cooling to remove heat
Knifeline Corrosion Attack in Austenitic
Stainless Steel Seam Welds
- Solution
- See Next Slide for more description
30Chromium Carbide Precipitation Kinetics Diagram
1500 F
1500 F
M23C6 Precipitation
1200 F
800 F
Temperature
Chromium Oxide
800 F
M23C6 Chromium-Rich Carbides
Intergranular Corrosion
Time
31- Preventative Measures
- Short weld times
- Low heat input
- Lower carbon content in the base material
- 304L, 316L
- Stabilization of the material with titanium
additions - 321 (5xC)
- Stabilization with columbium or tantalum
additions - 347, 348 (10xC)
- Lower nitrogen content (N acts like C)
32Projection Welding Austenitic Stainless Steel
Because of the Greater Thermal Expansion and
Contraction, Head Follow-up is critical
- Solution
- Press Type machines with low inertia heads
- Air operated for faster action
In Welding Tubes with Ring projections for leak
tight application, electrode set-up is critical
- Solution
- Test electrode alignment
33Cross Wire Welding Austenitic Stainless Steel
Often used for grates, shelves, baskets, etc.
- Use flat faced electrodes, or
- V-grooved electrodes to hold wires in a fixture
- As many as 40 welds made at one time
34Flash Welding Austenitic Stainless Steel
- Current about 15 less than for plain carbon
- Higher upset pressure
- The higher upset requires 40-50 higher clamp
force - Larger upset to extrude oxides out
35Super Austenitic
- Alloys with composition between standard 300
Austenitic SS and Ni-base Alloys - High Ni, High Mo
- Ni Mo- Improved chloride induced Stress
Corrosion Cracking
- Used in
- Sea water application where regular austenitics
suffer pitting, crevice and SCC
36AWS Welding Handbook
37The Super Austenitic Stainless Steels are
susceptible to copper contamination cracking.
RESISTANCE WELDING NOT NORMALLY PERFORMED
- Copper and Copper Alloy Electrodes can cause
cracking - Flame spray coated electrodes
- Low heat
38- Nitrogen-Strengthened Austenitic
- High nitrogen levels, combined with higher
manganese content, help to increase the strength
level of the material - Consider a postweld heat treatment for an optimum
corrosion resistance
Little Weld Data Available
39- Martensitic
- Contain from 12 to 18 percent chromium and
0.12 to 1.20 percent carbon with low nickel
content - Combined carbon and chromium content gives these
steels high hardenability - Magnetic
- Tempering of the low-carbon martensitic
stainless steels should avoid the 440 to 540 C
temperature range because of a sharp reduction in
notch-impact resistance
Applications Some Aircraft Rocket
Applications Cutlery
40- Martensitic SS Wrought Alloys are divided into
two groups - 12 Cr, low-carbon engineering grades (top
group) - High Cr, High C Cutlery grades (middle group)
AWS Welding Handbook
41From a Metallurgical Standpoint, Martensitic SS
is similar to Plain Carbon
AWS Welding Handbook
42Martensitic
- Spot Welding
- HAZ Structural Changes
- Tempering of hard martensite at BM side
- Quench to hard martensite at WM side
- Likelihood of cracking in HAZ increases with
Carbon - Pre-heat, post-heat, tempering helps
- Flash Weld
- Hard HAZ
- Temper in machine
- High Cr Steels get oxide entrapment at interface
- Precise control of flashing upset
- N or Inert gas shielding
43Effect of Tempered Martensite on Hardness
As Quenched
Loss of Hardness and Strength
Hardened Martensite Tempered Martensite
Hardness
Fusion Zone
SS with carbon content above 0.15 Carbon (431,
440) are susceptible to cracking and need Post
Weld Heat Treatment
HAZ
Distance
44- Ferritic
- Contain from 11.5 to 27 percent chromium, with
additions of manganese and silicon, and
occasionally nickel, aluminum, molybdenum or
titanium - Ferritic at all temperatures, no phase change,
large grain sizes - Non-hardenable by heat treatment
- Magnetic (generally)
Applications Water Tanks in Europe Storage
Tanks
45AWS Welding Handbook
46FERRITIC STAINLESS STEELS
Spot Seam Welding
Because No Phase Change, Get Grain Growth
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48FERRITIC STAINLESS STEELS
Flash Weld
- Lower Cr can be welded with standard flash weld
techniques - loss of toughness, however
- Higher Cr get oxidation
- Inert gas shield recommended
- long flash time high upset to expel oxides
49Super Ferritic
- Lower than ordinary interstitial (CN)
- Higher Cr Mo
AWS Welding Handbook
50Increased Cr Mo promotes Embrittlement
- 825F Sigma Phase (FeCr) precipitation
embrittlement - 885F Embrittlement (decomposition of
iron-chromium ferrite) - 1560F Chi Phase (Fe36Cr12Mo10) precipitation
embrittlement
Because of the Embrittlement, Resistance Welding
is Usually Not Done on These Steels
51- Precipitation-Hardened
- Can produce a matrix structure of either
austenite or martensite - Heat treated to form CbC, TiC, AlN, Ni3Al
- Possess very high strength levels
- Can serve at higher temperature than the
martensitic grades
Applications High Strength Components in Jet
Rocket Engines Bombs
52AWS Welding Handbook
53- Martensitic
- Solution heat treat above 1900F
- Cool to form martensite
- Precipitation strengthen
- Fabricated
- Semiaustenitic
- Solution heat treat (still contain 5-20 delta
ferrite) - Quench but remain austenitic (Ms below RT)
- Fabricate
- Harden (austenitize, low temp quench, age)
- Austenitic
- Remain austinite
- Harden treatment
54RCRapid Cool to RT SZC Rapid cool to -100F
ACAir cooled WQWater Quenched
AWS Welding Handbook
55Effect on Aging on the Nugget Hardness in
Precipitation-Hardened Stainless Steels
Aged
Hardness
- When Welded in the Aged Condition
- Higher Electrode Forces
- Post Weld Treatment
Annealed
Weld Centerline
Distance
56Precipitation-Hardened
- Spot Welding
- 17-7PH, A-286, PH15-7Mo, AM350 AM355 have been
welded - Generally welded in aged condition, higher
forces needed - Time as short as possible
- Seam Welding
- 17-7PH has been welded
- Increased electrode force
- Flash Welding
- Higher upset pressure
- Post weld heat treatment
57Duplex
- Low Carbon
- Mixture bcc Ferrite fcc Austenite
- Better SCC and Pitting Resistance than
Austenitics - Yield Strengths twice the 300 Series
Early grades had 75-80 Ferrite (poor weldability
due to ferrite) Later grades have 50-50
58AWS Welding Handbook
59- Due to the Ferrite
- Sensitive to 885F embrittlement
- Sigma Phase embrittlement above 1000F
- High ductile to brittle transition temperatures
(low toughness) - Solidifies as ferrite, subsequent ppt of
nitrides, carbides which reduces corrosion
resistance - Rapid cooling promotes additional ferrite
- Not Hot Crack Sensitive
Resistance Welds generally not recommended
because low toughness and low corrosion
resistance Unless post weld solution anneal and
quench.
60Some Applications
61Method of Making an Ultra Light Engine Valve
Deep Drawing of Plain Carbon Steel
or Stainless Steel
Stainless Steel Cap
Resistance Weld
Larson, J Bonesteel, D Method of Making an
Ultra Light Engine Valve US Patent 5,619,796
Apr 15, 1997
62Homework