Crack Suppression in Metal Active Gas Overlay Remanufacturing of Tunnel Boring Machine Cutter Rings Under Longitudinal Alternating Magnetic Field Stirring of the Weld Pool
Feiqi Fan, Xing Zeng, Shuhao Dai, Kui Zhang, Fei HeCrack defects are prone to occur during MAG overlay remanufacturing of TBM cutter rings, thereby affecting the repair quality and service reliability of the remanufactured layer. In this study, longitudinal alternating magnetic field (LAMF) stirring was introduced into the MAG overlay remanufacturing process of H13 steel cutter rings to regulate molten-pool behavior and suppress crack defects. A molten-pool-scale sequentially coupled thermo-fluid-electromagnetic model was developed to compare the relative changes in the temperature and velocity fields with and without LAMF under identical MAG process parameters, heat-source input, material properties, and boundary conditions. In the model, the effect of LAMF was introduced through a Lorentz-force source term acting on the electrically conductive molten metal. The simulation results show that LAMF promoted heat redistribution within the molten pool, smoothed the thermal transition near the rear region of the molten pool, and reduced local heat accumulation. Meanwhile, LAMF modified the molten-pool flow pattern by weakening excessive flow along the welding direction and enhancing transverse circulation and vortex-induced mixing. Comparative overlay remanufacturing experiments were then conducted using a self-built magnetic-field stirring platform. Penetrant testing, X-ray inspection, metallographic observation, and industrial CT reconstruction were combined to characterize surface cracks, internal defects, and post-solidification microstructure. Compared with the non-LAMF condition, the maximum internal crack length decreased from 29.41 mm to 20.30 mm, corresponding to a reduction of 30.98%, and the crack-defect volume fraction decreased from 0.93% to 0.28%, corresponding to a decrease of 0.65 percentage points. The combined simulation and characterization results indicate that Lorentz-force-driven electromagnetic stirring improves the thermal-fluid conditions near the solidification front, thereby effectively reducing the formation tendency of solidification-related crack defects during MAG overlay remanufacturing.