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    Global and Local Mechanical Properties and Microstructure of Friction Stir Welds with Dissimilar Materials and/or Thicknesses

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    This article studies the properties of a wide range of friction-stir-welded joints with dissimilar aluminum alloys or thicknesses. Two aluminum alloys, namely, 2024-T3 and 7075-T6, are selected for the study and are welded in ten different combinations of alloys and thicknesses. The welding parameters are optimized for each configuration, and a systematic study of the effects of material and thickness combinations on the microstructural features, global and local mechanical properties, and fracture mechanisms of the welds is carried out. It is shown that dissimilar alloys are extruded into each other, the texture is heterogeneous in the weld zone, and that there is no significant diffusion of alloying elements between the alloys. For most configurations, the local and global mechanical properties decrease as the thickness ratio increases. The local yield strength and plasticity parameters substantially vary next to the weld centerline, hence requiring their implementation in finite element method (FEM) models. Machining to obtain a constant thickness significantly influences the mechanical properties of the welds. The fracture mechanism is found to be a mixture of ductile and brittle fractures and to qualify as ‘‘quasi-cleavage.’’Materials Science and EngineeringMechanical, Maritime and Materials Engineerin
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