WO2001062430A1 - Method and apparatus for joining workpieces - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for joining workpieces Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2001062430A1
WO2001062430A1 PCT/NO2001/000066 NO0100066W WO0162430A1 WO 2001062430 A1 WO2001062430 A1 WO 2001062430A1 NO 0100066 W NO0100066 W NO 0100066W WO 0162430 A1 WO0162430 A1 WO 0162430A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
workpieces
joining
pin
rotating
workpiece
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/NO2001/000066
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Antonie Oosterkamp
Ljiljana Djapic Oosterkamp
Jan Charles Bersaas
Original Assignee
Norsk Hydro Asa
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Norsk Hydro Asa filed Critical Norsk Hydro Asa
Priority to AU2001237828A priority Critical patent/AU2001237828A1/en
Publication of WO2001062430A1 publication Critical patent/WO2001062430A1/en

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K20/00Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating
    • B23K20/12Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating the heat being generated by friction; Friction welding
    • B23K20/129Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating the heat being generated by friction; Friction welding specially adapted for particular articles or workpieces
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K20/00Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating
    • B23K20/12Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating the heat being generated by friction; Friction welding
    • B23K20/122Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating the heat being generated by friction; Friction welding using a non-consumable tool, e.g. friction stir welding
    • B23K20/123Controlling or monitoring the welding process
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K2103/00Materials to be soldered, welded or cut
    • B23K2103/02Iron or ferrous alloys
    • B23K2103/04Steel or steel alloys
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K2103/00Materials to be soldered, welded or cut
    • B23K2103/08Non-ferrous metals or alloys
    • B23K2103/10Aluminium or alloys thereof

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a new method of joining workpieces by means of a novel solid state bonding process called pin pressure joining and more particularly to solid state bonding of materials exhibiting different deformation behaviour characteristics and also to an apparatus to conduct such joining.
  • FSW friction stir weld process
  • one circular rotating pin is urged in between two assembled adjacent to be joined workpieces of normally similar alloys along their joining line, creating a plasticized region in both work- pieces, their together deformation resulting in a mixed, solid state bonded region along the joining line in both workpieces.
  • a rotating shoulder is being brought into contact with the to be joined members to add frictional heat input, aiding the plasticizing of these workpieces.
  • Fig. 1 illustrates schematically the new principle of bonding of two members of dissimilar material
  • Figs. 2a,b show schematically a variant of the novel bonding method applying dual rotating pins
  • Figs. 3a,b,c illustrate schematically the novel bonding method applied on/providing lap welds
  • Figs. 4a,b show a picture of a joint between steel and Al-alloy members provided by the novel bonding method.
  • Fig. 1 illustrating by way of an example the novel joining method, to be joined members, one made of soft material 1 and the second 2 of harder material, e.g. Al-alloy and steel, are assembled along their joining line.
  • the rotating stir pin 3 attached to a shoulder 4 is urged into the soft alloy member adjacent to the joining line 5, but with its perimeter maintaining a small distance, t, from the edge of the hard workpiece, thus ensuring no or only very limited contact with the latter.
  • the pin 3 is urged in so far that contact between the pin's attached shoulder (not shown in the Figure) and both workpieces is achieved for purposes of frictional heat generation to aid the plasticizing and subsequent diffusion processes.
  • the rotating pin and shoulder are traversed, with speed v, along the joining line in the soft alloy workpiece, while maintaining the pin perimeter distance t with the edge of the hard alloy workpiece.
  • the preferential rotational direction of the pin ⁇ is against the traverse (joining) direction on the line of the joint, but in some combinations of alloys or metals and desired welding speeds the same directions can be envisaged as beneficial.
  • the preferable embodiment/mode of operation is to engage the softer material with the rotating pin, but in some cases it can be advantageous to engage the member with the harder material.
  • Mechanical properties of the bond can be expected to be better when the degree of deformation of the harder material's contacting surface is the determining factor.
  • the novel method of providing the solid state bond between the two workpieces is now the deformation and movement of material of the softer alloy workpiece 1 around the pin in the narrow gap between the pin and the edge of the harder alloy workpiece, thus building up pressure (p2>p1 ) and increasing resulting deformation (shear ⁇ ) with the objective to make the material of the softer alloy workpiece coming into contact with the edge of the harder alloy workpiece and matching its surface asperities to such an extent that diffusion occurs between the dissimilar materials, and thus a solid state bond is created.
  • the gap t between the pin and edge of the harder alloy workpiece 2 is chosen such, and may under certain circumstances even be close to zero, that the resulting pressure in the gap exceeds the yield limit of the harder alloy, thus aiding the matching of the contacting surfaces, but it is not a necessity.
  • the process may depend on a level of cleanliness of the edge of the harder alloy.
  • the control of the width of the gap can either be position or force based.
  • the width of the gap, t, in combination with the joining speed, rotational velocity ⁇ and diameter of pin determine pressure build-up and shear.
  • a variant of the novel bonding method based on dual rotating pins is schematically shown in Figs. 2a,b as a top view 1 a and a cross-sectional vertical view 2b taken along line A-A in Fig. 2a.
  • FIG. 3a,b A variant of the novel bonding method to provide lap joining type of seams is illustrated in Figs. 3a,b as a top view 3a and a cross-sectional vertical view 3b taken along line B-B in Fig. 3a.
  • the principle differentiates in so far from from the above described principle one that the pin 3 penetrates the first workpiece 1 until a distance t from the second workpiece 2.
  • the pin 3 is tilted as shown in Fig. 3b in relation to the perpendicular axis with the workpiece, in the plane between the perpendicular axis and the direction of welding.
  • the amount of tilting depends on the resulting distance, the smaller t, the smaller the tilt angle can be chosen.
  • the rotating, transverse moving pin will now compress material from front to back under the pin, thus creating the pressure increase resulting in deformation (shear ⁇ ) with the objective to make the bottom material of the first workpiece coming into contact with the top of the second workpiece and matching its surface asperities to such an extent that diffusion occurs between the dissimilar materials, and thus a solid state bond is created.
  • the tilt angle ⁇ might be chosen opposite thus compressing material from the back of the pin to the front. This might aid heat input from the shoulder in front of the joint line.
  • FIG. 3c A variant of the bonding method according to the present invention applying dual rotating pins 3,3' attached to their respective shoulders 4,4' is illustrated schematically in Fig. 3c.
  • a second, tilted pin 3' engages the second workpiece from the other side.
  • both pins 3,3' rotate building up pressure and increasing deformation in the narrow gap, made up of t+t2 between them, thus allowing the joining lines of both workpieces to come into narrow contact while matching surface asperities, diffusion taking place, thus forming a solid state bond.
  • the pins 3,3' can be tilted at identical or different angles ⁇ , ⁇ .
  • Fig. 4 shows (an enlarged) picture of a novel solid state joint 7 between two materials exhibiting different deformation behaviour, workpiece 1 made of Al-alloy and workpiece 2 made of steel, respectively.
  • the workpieces have been joined by the novel method according to the present invention applying a rotating friction stir pin urged into workpiece 1 being a plate made of Al-alloy A6063 joined to a steel plate/member 2 of identical thickness (steel quality ST36 was applied).
  • workpiece 1 being a plate made of Al-alloy A6063 joined to a steel plate/member 2 of identical thickness (steel quality ST36 was applied).
  • the resulting joint a sound bonded seam 7 between the two different materials was achieved exhibiting an ultimate strength of 65 MPa as a result of tests conducted on the provided sample of bonded materials.
  • thermoplastic members e.g. thermoplastic members
  • rotating means e.g. thermoplastic members
  • Coated workpieces/members e.g. zinc coated steel members, can also be advantageously joined to other members.
  • the new joining method offers an advantage over conventional friction stir welding even when two materials of similar deformation behaviour are to be joined when plasticizing one of the members might not be feasible or desirable.
  • One such example is joining of dissimilar aluminium alloys, one of which has good corrosion resistance in special temper condition (AA7108 in T79). Friction stir welding leads to partial loss of this condition in the HAZ. Pin pressure joining can be applied in such a manner that the other material to be joined is engaged, thus suppressing the loss of special temper condition of the material not engaged.
  • Another example would be when the geometry of the second member does not allow the insertion of a rotating pin, the second member might even be non-plasticizable.
  • Still another advantage compared to friction stir welding is that the requirements on dimensional tolerances of the contacting surfaces of the to be joined members are less severe due to the inherent "adaption" of the plasticized material to the solid edge of the second member.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Pressure Welding/Diffusion-Bonding (AREA)

Abstract

Novel solid state bonding method particularly for joining of materials exhibiting different deformation behaviour and an apparatus applicable in conducting such method is provided.

Description

"Method and apparatus for joining workpieces"
The present invention relates to a new method of joining workpieces by means of a novel solid state bonding process called pin pressure joining and more particularly to solid state bonding of materials exhibiting different deformation behaviour characteristics and also to an apparatus to conduct such joining.
Several previously known methods have been applied to join dissimilar metal alloys, e.g. roll cladding and also friction stir welding and extrusion welding processes were tried to be adapted for this purpose, but different drawbacks are connected to these conventional joining methods.
In the roll cladding process two plates of an often dissimilar metal alloy are rolled together in a single deformation step between two rolls, with the combined deformation and pressure bringing the surfaces of the two plates so close together that subsequent diffusion between the contacting material of the two plates gives rise to a solid state bond. The obvious limitation of this joining method is that only (large) partially overlapping members, e.g. plates, can be joined and joining of side to side arranged members is not possible. Furthermore, the actually applied apparatus represents a substantial investment, and joining along more intricate joining lines is not possible. In the friction stir weld process (further called FSW) one circular rotating pin is urged in between two assembled adjacent to be joined workpieces of normally similar alloys along their joining line, creating a plasticized region in both work- pieces, their together deformation resulting in a mixed, solid state bonded region along the joining line in both workpieces. A rotating shoulder is being brought into contact with the to be joined members to add frictional heat input, aiding the plasticizing of these workpieces. Thus no heat nor deformation is generated as in conventional friction welding due to a relative motion between the workpieces to be joined. However, it is difficult and in some cases impossible to join dissimilar alloys or materials, due to differences in deformational behaviour between dissimilar alloys and metals.
In extrusion welding two separate streams of the same alloy are brought together under deformation (shear) and pressure at elevated temperatures first in the welding chamber and subsequently the opening (bearing channel) of an extrusion die so that diffusion occurs and the solid state bond between the two streams results.
Disadvantages here are that large equipment and expensive tooling is needed and the maximum size of the tooling limits the size of the members to be joined. Different material properties between the joined to be materials, like e.g. melting point and deformation work, can severely hinder application of extrusion welding.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a new joining process eliminating the present disadvantages and enabling two workpieces of either dissimilar alloys or entirely different materials to be solid state bonded along their joint line without the need for rolling or extruding them together. These and other objects of the present invention are met by provision of a novel joining/bonding method as defined in the attached patent claim 1 , the preferred mode of conducting of the method according to dependent claims 2-5 and an apparatus to conduct such method according to claim 6.
The invention will now be described in details by way of examples and preferred operating modes in the following description referring to the attached drawings, Figs. 1 -4, where
Fig. 1 illustrates schematically the new principle of bonding of two members of dissimilar material,
Figs. 2a,b show schematically a variant of the novel bonding method applying dual rotating pins,
Figs. 3a,b,c illustrate schematically the novel bonding method applied on/providing lap welds, and
Figs. 4a,b show a picture of a joint between steel and Al-alloy members provided by the novel bonding method.
Referring to Fig. 1 illustrating by way of an example the novel joining method, to be joined members, one made of soft material 1 and the second 2 of harder material, e.g. Al-alloy and steel, are assembled along their joining line. The rotating stir pin 3 attached to a shoulder 4 is urged into the soft alloy member adjacent to the joining line 5, but with its perimeter maintaining a small distance, t, from the edge of the hard workpiece, thus ensuring no or only very limited contact with the latter. The pin 3 is urged in so far that contact between the pin's attached shoulder (not shown in the Figure) and both workpieces is achieved for purposes of frictional heat generation to aid the plasticizing and subsequent diffusion processes. Then the rotating pin and shoulder are traversed, with speed v, along the joining line in the soft alloy workpiece, while maintaining the pin perimeter distance t with the edge of the hard alloy workpiece. The preferential rotational direction of the pin ω is against the traverse (joining) direction on the line of the joint, but in some combinations of alloys or metals and desired welding speeds the same directions can be envisaged as beneficial.
The preferable embodiment/mode of operation is to engage the softer material with the rotating pin, but in some cases it can be advantageous to engage the member with the harder material. Mechanical properties of the bond can be expected to be better when the degree of deformation of the harder material's contacting surface is the determining factor.
The novel method of providing the solid state bond between the two workpieces is now the deformation and movement of material of the softer alloy workpiece 1 around the pin in the narrow gap between the pin and the edge of the harder alloy workpiece, thus building up pressure (p2>p1 ) and increasing resulting deformation (shear τ) with the objective to make the material of the softer alloy workpiece coming into contact with the edge of the harder alloy workpiece and matching its surface asperities to such an extent that diffusion occurs between the dissimilar materials, and thus a solid state bond is created. The gap t between the pin and edge of the harder alloy workpiece 2 is chosen such, and may under certain circumstances even be close to zero, that the resulting pressure in the gap exceeds the yield limit of the harder alloy, thus aiding the matching of the contacting surfaces, but it is not a necessity. The process may depend on a level of cleanliness of the edge of the harder alloy. The control of the width of the gap can either be position or force based. The width of the gap, t, in combination with the joining speed, rotational velocity ω and diameter of pin determine pressure build-up and shear. A variant of the novel bonding method based on dual rotating pins is schematically shown in Figs. 2a,b as a top view 1 a and a cross-sectional vertical view 2b taken along line A-A in Fig. 2a.
The principle differentiates in so far from principle one that a second pin 3' engages the second workpiece from the other side. This pin is also urged into the workpiece adjacent to the joining line but with its perimeter maintaining a small distance, t2, from the edge of the first workpiece, thus ensuring no or only very limited contact with the latter. The shoulder 4' is used for the same purposes as the shoulder attached to pin number one. Now both pins rotate against each other, building up pressure and increasing deformation in the narrow gap between them, made up of t+t2, thus allowing the joining lines of both workpieces to come into narrow contact while matching surface asperities, diffusion taking place thus forming a solid state bond. The choice of rotational direction is here also dependent on choice of welding speed and alloy combinations, but the most likely configuration is counter rotating pins as indicated by w1 , w2 and in the Figure, thus forming small scale rolling equipment.
A variant of the novel bonding method to provide lap joining type of seams is illustrated in Figs. 3a,b as a top view 3a and a cross-sectional vertical view 3b taken along line B-B in Fig. 3a.
The principle differentiates in so far from from the above described principle one that the pin 3 penetrates the first workpiece 1 until a distance t from the second workpiece 2. The pin 3 is tilted as shown in Fig. 3b in relation to the perpendicular axis with the workpiece, in the plane between the perpendicular axis and the direction of welding. The amount of tilting depends on the resulting distance, the smaller t, the smaller the tilt angle can be chosen. The rotating, transverse moving pin will now compress material from front to back under the pin, thus creating the pressure increase resulting in deformation (shear τ) with the objective to make the bottom material of the first workpiece coming into contact with the top of the second workpiece and matching its surface asperities to such an extent that diffusion occurs between the dissimilar materials, and thus a solid state bond is created. The tilt angle α might be chosen opposite thus compressing material from the back of the pin to the front. This might aid heat input from the shoulder in front of the joint line.
A variant of the bonding method according to the present invention applying dual rotating pins 3,3' attached to their respective shoulders 4,4' is illustrated schematically in Fig. 3c. A second, tilted pin 3' engages the second workpiece from the other side. Now both pins 3,3' rotate building up pressure and increasing deformation in the narrow gap, made up of t+t2 between them, thus allowing the joining lines of both workpieces to come into narrow contact while matching surface asperities, diffusion taking place, thus forming a solid state bond. The pins 3,3' can be tilted at identical or different angles α,β.
Example
Fig. 4 shows (an enlarged) picture of a novel solid state joint 7 between two materials exhibiting different deformation behaviour, workpiece 1 made of Al-alloy and workpiece 2 made of steel, respectively.
The workpieces have been joined by the novel method according to the present invention applying a rotating friction stir pin urged into workpiece 1 being a plate made of Al-alloy A6063 joined to a steel plate/member 2 of identical thickness (steel quality ST36 was applied). As shown in the pictures 4a and 4b showing in a top view and corresponding vertical cross-sectional view, respectively, the resulting joint a sound bonded seam 7 between the two different materials was achieved exhibiting an ultimate strength of 65 MPa as a result of tests conducted on the provided sample of bonded materials. Even if the novel method according to the present invention is described and illustrated by way of examples applying metal material exhibiting different characteristics, the inventive novel method is not restricted by the examples.
Other materials, e.g. thermoplastic members, can be advantageously joined applying the novel method and other rotating means than the described/illustrated rotating pins can be applied for plastizing of material.
Furthermore, in the case of special alloys it could be instrumental to plasticize the harder member. Coated workpieces/members, e.g. zinc coated steel members, can also be advantageously joined to other members.
It is also viable to conduct joining of non-deformable members, e.g. ceramics, to a plasticized material member (metal) which is presently considered to be a challenge covered normally by mechanical bonding means or gluing.
Additionally, the new joining method offers an advantage over conventional friction stir welding even when two materials of similar deformation behaviour are to be joined when plasticizing one of the members might not be feasible or desirable. One such example is joining of dissimilar aluminium alloys, one of which has good corrosion resistance in special temper condition (AA7108 in T79). Friction stir welding leads to partial loss of this condition in the HAZ. Pin pressure joining can be applied in such a manner that the other material to be joined is engaged, thus suppressing the loss of special temper condition of the material not engaged. Another example would be when the geometry of the second member does not allow the insertion of a rotating pin, the second member might even be non-plasticizable.
Still another advantage compared to friction stir welding is that the requirements on dimensional tolerances of the contacting surfaces of the to be joined members are less severe due to the inherent "adaption" of the plasticized material to the solid edge of the second member.

Claims

Claims
1. Method of joining workpieces by means of a solid state bonding process, particularly joining of materials exhibiting different deformation behaviour, comprising steps of
(pre)assembling of the joined to be workpieces along the joining line, urging a rotating pin into one of the workpieces in a predetermined distance from the joining line, moving the pin keeping the distance to the edge of the second workpiece, hereby plasticizing the engaged member's material, - forcing the plasticized material into a gap provided between the second workpiece and the pin, thereby matching the contacting surfaces of the workpieces, and finally subsequent creation of a solid state joint.
2. The method according to claim 1 , characterized in that as a rotating pin a friction stir pin is applied and the joined workpieces are metal members.
3. The method according to claim 2, characterized in that one on the members is made of softer material than the second one.
4. The method according to claim 3, characterized in that the softer member is provided as Al-alloy workpiece and the second harder member is made of steel.
5. The method according to any preceding claims, characterized in that two rotating pins are simultaneously applied on the preassembled workpieces.
6. An apparatus applicable in the joining method according to claim 1 , characterized in that the apparatus comprises rotating means (3) plasticizing the material of one of the joined to be workpieces.
7. Apparatus according to claim 6, characterized in that as the rotating means (3), two or more rotating pins (3,3'), are provided hereby increasing the joining speed and the quality of the resulting joints.
PCT/NO2001/000066 2000-02-24 2001-02-23 Method and apparatus for joining workpieces WO2001062430A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU2001237828A AU2001237828A1 (en) 2000-02-24 2001-02-23 Method and apparatus for joining workpieces

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NO20000928 2000-02-24
NO20000928A NO20000928D0 (en) 2000-02-24 2000-02-24 Method and apparatus for joining

Publications (1)

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WO2001062430A1 true WO2001062430A1 (en) 2001-08-30

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NO (1) NO20000928D0 (en)
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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1279458A2 (en) * 2001-07-25 2003-01-29 Hitachi, Ltd. Friction stir welding method and component part welded by the method
WO2003092951A1 (en) 2002-04-29 2003-11-13 The Boeing Company Method and apparatus for friction stir welding
EP1498210A1 (en) * 2003-07-15 2005-01-19 Mazda Motor Corporation Friction stir welding method and friction stir welded structure
US8857696B1 (en) 2014-04-01 2014-10-14 King Fahd University Of Petroleum And Minerals Method and tool for friction stir welding
JP2021137813A (en) * 2020-03-02 2021-09-16 冨士端子工業株式会社 Joining method of dissimilar metal

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE19731638A1 (en) * 1997-07-23 1999-01-28 Andreas Schaaf Procedure for making frictional spot-welded joints using rubbing pin
JPH1158040A (en) * 1997-08-19 1999-03-02 Showa Alum Corp Friction-stirring-joining method for different kind of metal-made works
EP1029627A1 (en) * 1999-02-18 2000-08-23 Showa Aluminum Corporation Friction agitation jointing method of metal workpieces

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE19731638A1 (en) * 1997-07-23 1999-01-28 Andreas Schaaf Procedure for making frictional spot-welded joints using rubbing pin
JPH1158040A (en) * 1997-08-19 1999-03-02 Showa Alum Corp Friction-stirring-joining method for different kind of metal-made works
EP1029627A1 (en) * 1999-02-18 2000-08-23 Showa Aluminum Corporation Friction agitation jointing method of metal workpieces

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1279458A2 (en) * 2001-07-25 2003-01-29 Hitachi, Ltd. Friction stir welding method and component part welded by the method
EP1279458A3 (en) * 2001-07-25 2004-07-28 Hitachi, Ltd. Friction stir welding method and component part welded by the method
US7097091B2 (en) 2001-07-25 2006-08-29 Hitachi, Ltd. Friction stir welding method and component part welded by the method
WO2003092951A1 (en) 2002-04-29 2003-11-13 The Boeing Company Method and apparatus for friction stir welding
EP1498210A1 (en) * 2003-07-15 2005-01-19 Mazda Motor Corporation Friction stir welding method and friction stir welded structure
US7353977B2 (en) 2003-07-15 2008-04-08 Mazda Motor Corporation Frictional joining method and frictional joining structure
US8857696B1 (en) 2014-04-01 2014-10-14 King Fahd University Of Petroleum And Minerals Method and tool for friction stir welding
JP2021137813A (en) * 2020-03-02 2021-09-16 冨士端子工業株式会社 Joining method of dissimilar metal
JP7465465B2 (en) 2020-03-02 2024-04-11 冨士端子工業株式会社 Method for joining dissimilar metals

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Publication number Publication date
AU2001237828A1 (en) 2001-09-03
NO20000928D0 (en) 2000-02-24

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