Formation of Porous Inner Architecture at the Interface of Magnetic Pulse Welded Al/Cu Joints
Affiliation auteurs | !!!! Error affiliation !!!! |
Titre | Formation of Porous Inner Architecture at the Interface of Magnetic Pulse Welded Al/Cu Joints |
Type de publication | Conference Paper |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Auteurs | Sapanathan T., Raoelison R.N, Yang K., Buiron N., Rachik M. |
Editor | Chinesta F, Cueto E, AbissetChavanne E |
Conference Name | PROCEEDINGS OF THE 19TH INTERNATIONAL ESAFORM CONFERENCE ON MATERIAL FORMING (ESAFORM 2016) |
Publisher | ESAFORM; Ecole Centrale Nantes; Univ Zaragoza |
Conference Location | 2 HUNTINGTON QUADRANGLE, STE 1NO1, MELVILLE, NY 11747-4501 USA |
ISBN Number | 978-0-7354-1427-3 |
Résumé | Porous inner architecture has been revealed at the interface of magnetic pulse welded aluminum/copper (Al/Cu) joints. These materials could serve the purpose of heterogeneous architectured materials, while their makeup of inner architecture of porous interface with the pore sizes of sub-micron to a few microns, could offer potential attributes in energy storage application. Two welding cases with various impact intensities are compared. An input voltage of 6.5 kV with an initial air gap of 1.5 mm and a higher voltage of 7.5 kV with a large initial air gap of 5 mm are respectively considered as two cases with low and high velocity impacts. Overall morphology of the porous medium was revealed at the interface either in layered or pocketed structures. The allocation of the porous zone and pore sizes vary with the impact condition. The low velocity impact welding conditions also produces smaller pores compared to the high velocity impact case, where the pore sizes varies in submicron to a few microns (<10 mu m). By investigating the potential mechanism of the porous zone formation, it was identified that a combined phenomena of cavitation and coalescence play a major role in nucleation and growth of the pores where a rapid cooling that eventually freezes the porous structure at the interface. |
DOI | 10.1063/1.4963505 |