Ch 33
Filler metal
A concern with brazed joints is their enhanced susceptibility to corrosion. Because the filler metal is of different composition from the materials being joined, the brazed joint is actually a localized galvanic corrosion cell.
Fluxless brazing
A flux is not required. Controlled furnace atmospheres can make a flux unnecessary by reducing existing oxides and preventing the formation of new ones
Vapor-phase soldering
A product with prepositioned solder is passed through a chamber containing hot, saturated vapors, which condense on the cooler product, transferring the heat of vaporization
Assist gas
A stream of assist gas blows the molten metal through the cut, cools the workpiece, minimizes the heat-affected zone, and may participate in a combustion reaction with the material being cut.
Lead-free solders
At present, none of the lead-free solders meet all of these requirements, and most are deficient in more than one area
Hardfacing
Because the deposited surfaces are generally harder than the base metal, the process is often called hardfacing
Vapor-phase reflow soldering
Because the solder is prepositioned, this process is also known as vapor-phase reflow soldering
Torch-brazing
Common source of heat for brazing is the gas-flame torch. In the torch-brazing procedure, oxyacetylene, oxyhydrogen, or another gas-flame combination can be used.
Metallizing
If a nontransferred arc is used, only a mechanical bond is produced, and the process becomes a form of metallizing
Furnace brazing
If the flux and the filler metal can be preloaded into the joints and the part can endure uniform heating, a number of assemblies can be brazed simultaneously in controlled atmosphere or vacuum furnaces, a process known as furnace brazing
Capillary action
In brazing, bonding requires capillary action to distribute the filler metal between the closely fitting surfaces of the joint.
Autogenous welds
Laser-beam welding is most effective for simple fusion welds without filler material, called autogenous welds.
Hybrid processes
Lasers have also been used in hybrid processes that combine laser welding with arc welding, with both operating in one process zone and producing one weld pool.
Molding plates
Liquids are confined in electroslag welding to the region between the materials being joined by means of sliding water-cooled molding plates that are usually made of copper.
Joint clearance
Of all the factors contributing to joint strength, joint clearance is the most important. There must be sufficient clearance for the braze metal to wet the joint and flow into it under the force of capillary action.
Endothermic cutting
See exothermic cutting
Fluxless soldering
Several fluxless soldering techniques have been developed using controlled atmospheres, thermomechanical surface activation, or protective coatings that prevent oxide formation and enhance wetting
Corrosive or noncorrosive, rosin
Soldering fluxes are generally classified as corrosive or noncorrosive. The most common noncorrosive flux is rosin (the residue after distilling turpentine) dissolved in alcohol
Laser-beam welding
The beam of coherent light can be focused to a very small diameter, providing a huge power density. The high-intensity beam can be used to simply melt the material at the joint, but more often, it produces a very narrow column of vaporized metal ( a "keyhole") with a surrounding liquid pool.
Electron-beam welding (EBW)
The metal to be welded is heated by the impingement of a beam of high-velocity electrons
Salt-bath brazing
Third type of heating is salt-bath brazing, where the parts are preheated and then dipped into a bath of molten salt that is maintained at a temperature slightly above the melting point of the brazing material
Soldering
a brazing-type operation where the filler metal has a melting temperature below 450 C
Fluidity
a measure of the flow characteristics of the molten braze metal and is a function of the metal, its temperature, surface cleanliness, and clearance.
Thermit
a mechanical mixture of about one part (by weight) finely divided aluminum and three parts iron oxide plus possible alloy additions
Flash welding
a process used to produce butt welds between similar or dissimilar metals in solid or tubular form
Wave soldering
a process used to solder wire ends, such as the multiple connectors that protrude through holes in electronic circuit boards
Wettability
a strong function of the surface tensions between the braze metal and the base alloy. Generally, the wettability is good when the surfaces are clean and the two metals can form intermediate diffused alloys.
Electroslag welding
a very effective process for welding thick sections of steel plate. There is no arc involved (except to start the weld)
Silver solders
alloys based on silver and copper, have brazing temperatures significantly below that of pure copper and are used in joining steels, copper, brass, and nickel.
Upset welding
also similar to flash welding, but there is no period of arcing. The heating is achieved through electrical resistance.
Thermit welding
an extremely old process in which superheated molten metal and slag are produced from an exothermic chemical reaction between a metal oxide and a metallic reducing agent
Percussion welding
as similar process to flash welding, in which a rapid discharge of stored energy produces a brief period of arcing, which is followed by the rapid application of force to expel the molten metal and produce the joint. In percussion welding, the duration of the arc is 1 to 10 ms.
Laser-beam cutting
begins by "drilling" a hole through the material and then moving the beam along a programmed path.
Laser spot welding
can be performed with access to only one side of the joint. It is a noncontact process and produces no indentations
Resistance brazing
can be used to produce relatively simple joints in metals with high electrical conductivity
Lap joints
can provide bonding areas that are considerably larger than butt configuration. They are often preferred when maximum strength is required.
Braze welding
differs from straight brazing in that capillary action is not required to distribute the filler material
Butt joints
do not require additional thickness in the vicinity of the joint and are most often used where the strength requirements are not that critical.
Kerf
narrower than with any other thermal cutting process
Thermal spray
offer a means of applying a coating of high-performance material to more economical and more easily fabricated base metals
Brazing fluxes, flux
play an important part in the process by: (1) dissolving oxides (2) preventing the formation of new oxides (3) lowering the surface tension between the molten brazing metal and the surface to be joined. Ideally, the flux will melt and become active at a temperature below the solidus of the filler metal, yet remain active throughout the entire range of temperatures encountered while making the braze
Exothermic cutting
produces an oxidized edges, while endothermic cutting (also called clean cutting) results in oxide-free surfaces
Dip brazing
the assemblies are immersed in a bath of molten brazing metal
Brazing
the permanent joining of similar or dissimilar metals or ceramics through the use of heat and a filler metal whose melting temperature is above 450C but below the melting point of the materials being joined.
Surface of thermal cladding
the process of depositing a layer of weld metal on the surface or edge of a different composition base material
Jigs and fixtures
used to hold the components during the heating
Induction brazing
utilizes high-frequency induction currents as the source of heat and is therefore limited to the joining of electrically conductive materials
Dip soldering
where the entire piece is immersed in molten metal, has been used to produce automobile radiators and "tinned" coatings.