1 research outputs found
Mitigation of welding distortion and residual stresses via cryogenic CO2 cooling-a numerical investigation
Fusion welding remains the most common and convenient fabrication method for large, thin-
plate welded structures. However, the resulting tendency to out-of-plane distortion exacts
severe design and fabrication penalties in terms of poorer buckling performance, lack of
fairness in external appearance, poor fit-up and frequent requirements for expensive rework.
There are several ways to mitigate welding distortion and this study concentrates on the use
of cryogenic CO2 cooling to reduce distortion. A feasible combination of welding process and
cooling parameters, was investigated computationally and the resulting effects on final
deformation were predicted. Three different computational strategies were developed and
applied to butt-welding and fillet-welding processes, with and without the inclusion of
cryogenic cooling. In the first method, a fully transient, uncoupled thermo-elastoplastic model
was investigated. This method is comprehensive but not readily applicable to predict welding
distortions in complex, industrial-scale, welded structures, due to the large computational
requirement. More computationally efficient models are needed therefore and two further
models of this type are suggested in this study. The results show good agreement between
the different models, despite substantial differences in computational budget. In butt-welded
plates, a significant decrease in out-of-plane distortion is obtained when cryogenic cooling is
applied. In fillet-welded plates, cooling had much less effect on welding distortion. This was
largely due to the size and configuration of the test case assemblies and the fact that the
attached stiffener greatly increased the overall stiffness and resistance to contraction forces.peer-reviewe
