DOI: 10.3390/met15080824 ISSN: 2075-4701

Effect of Ni-Based Buttering on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of a Bimetallic API 5L X-52/AISI 316L-Si Welded Joint

Luis Ángel Lázaro-Lobato, Gildardo Gutiérrez-Vargas, Francisco Fernando Curiel-López, Víctor Hugo López-Morelos, María del Carmen Ramírez-López, Julio Cesar Verduzco-Juárez, José Jaime Taha-Tijerina

The microstructure and mechanical properties of welded joints of API 5L X-52 steel plates cladded with AISI 316L-Si austenitic stainless steel were evaluated. The gas metal arc welding process with pulsed arc (GMAW-P) and controlled arc oscillation were used to join the bimetallic plates. After the root welding pass, buttering with an ERNiCrMo-3 filler wire was performed and multi-pass welding followed using an ER70S-6 electrode. The results obtained by optical and scanning electron microscopy indicated that the shielding atmosphere, welding parameters, and electric arc oscillation enabled good arc stability and proper molten metal transfer from the filler wire to the sidewalls of the joint during welding. Vickers microhardness (HV) and tensile tests were performed for correlating microstructural and mechanical properties. The mixture of ERNiCrMo-3 and ER70S-6 filler materials presented fine interlocked grains with a honeycomb network shape of the Ni–Fe mixture with Ni-rich grain boundaries and a cellular-dendritic and equiaxed solidification. Variation of microhardness at the weld metal (WM) in the middle zone of the bimetallic welded joints (BWJ) is associated with the manipulation of the welding parameters, promoting precipitation of carbides in the austenitic matrix and formation of martensite during solidification of the weld pool and cooling of the WM. The BWJ exhibited a mechanical strength of 380 and 520 MPa for the yield stress and ultimate tensile strength, respectively. These values are close to those of the as-received API 5L X-52 steel.

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