Friction Stir Welding and Processing in Alloy Manufacturing


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About The Book

Friction stir welding (FSW) is considered to be the most significant development in metal joining in decades and in addition is a green technology due to its energy efficiency environmental friendliness and versatility. This process offers a number of advantages over conventional joining processes. Furthermore because welding occurs via the deformation of material at temperatures below the melting temperature many problems commonly associated with joining of dissimilar alloys can be avoided and thus high-quality welds are produced. Due to this fact FSW has been widely used in different industrial applications where metallurgical characteristics should be retained such as in the aeronautic naval and automotive industries. The computational modeling of FSW processes is an extremely challenging task due to the highly nonlinear and coupled nature of the physical problem and the numerical issues that need to be properly addressed. This is why the numerical simulation of FSW processes has been a very active research field in the last few decades. Despite the complexity of the physical problem and its numerical simulation significant advances in the field have been achieved as a result of interdisciplinary research on related fields of computational mechanics constitutive modeling materials characterization mathematical analysis and numerical methods. This book collects some of the last developments in the fields of FSW friction stir spot welding and friction stir processing written by well-known researchers who have contributed significantly to advances in the computational modeling numerical simulation and material characterization of those processes.
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