Plasma Arc Welding

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PLASMA ARC WELDING

PAW - Principle of operation


Principle of operation
Principle of operation
TIG vs. Plasma welding
TIG vs. Plasma welding comparison
TIG welding Plasma welding
•TIG arc is not •electrode is recessed 
constricted  relative arc is collimated and
wide heat pattern on the focused by the
workpiece constricting nozzle

•arc is conical  heated •electrode is recessed 


area varies with impossible for the
electrode-to-work electrode to touch the
distance workpiece

•electrode extends •arc is essentially


beyond the end of gas cylindrical  very little
nozzle  possible weld change in the heated
contamination area
Arc constriction
Factors affecting intensity of plasma

•plasma (electrical) current: higher for cutting,


lower for welding
•orifice diameter and shape: smaller for cutting,
larger for welding
•type of orifice gas
•orifice gas flow rate: higher for cutting, lower
for welding
•distance to workpiece
Plasma arc modes

 generally used for


welding
 work is part of
electrical circuit
 heat is obtained from
anode spot and from
plasma jet
 greater energy
transfer to the work
Plasma arc modes

 used for cutting and


joining non-
conductive
workpiece
 workpiece is not in
the arc circuit
 heat is obtained
from plasma jet only
 low energy
concentration
Plasma process techniques
Microplasma

 very low welding currents (0,1-15 Amps)


 very stable needle-like stiff arc 
minimises arc wander and distortions
 for welding thin materials (down to 0,1 mm
thick), wire and mesh sections
Medium current plasma
 higher welding currents (15-200 Amps)
 similar to TIG but arc is stiffer  deeper
penetration
 more control on arc penetration
Plasma process techniques
Microplasma and medium current plasma advantages

 energy concentration is greater  higher welding


speed
 energy concentration is greater  lower current is
needed to produce a given weld  less distortions
 improved arc stability
 arc column has greater directional stability
 narrow bead  less distortions
 less need for fixturing
 variations in torch stand-off distance have little effect
on bead width or heat concentration  positional
weld is much easy
 tungsten electrode is recessed  no tungsten
Plasma process techniques
Microplasma and medium current plasma limitations

 narrow constricted arc  little tolerance


for joint misalignment
 manual torches are heavy and bulky 
difficult to manipulate
 for consistent quality, constricting nozzle
must be well maintained
Plasma process technique
Plasma process techniques
Keyhole plasma welding

 welding currents over 100 Amps


 for welding thick materials (up to 10 mm)
Plasma process techniques

Keyhole plasma welding advantages


 plasma stream helps remove gases and
impurities
 narrow fusion zone reduces transverse
residual stresses and distortion
 a square butt joint configuration is
generally used  reduced joint
preparation
 single pass weld  reduced weld time
Plasma process techniques

MMA MAG TIG PAW


Plasma process techniques
Keyhole plasma welding limitations

 more process variables and narrow


operating windows
 fit-up is critical
 increased operator skill, particularly on
thicker materials  high accuracy for
positioning
 except for aluminium alloys, keyhole
welding is restricted to downhand position
 for consistent operation, plasma torch
must be well maintained
Plasma welding equipment
Plasma welding equipment
 DCEN for most welding applications
 AC (usually square wave) for aluminium and
magnesium alloys
 pulsed current for better profile and weld bead
shape
 drooping characteristic power source
 “pilot” arc is initiated using HF
 pilot arc ensures reliable arc starting and it
obviates the need for HF
 high OCV required (50 - 200 V)
 additional interlocks to detect low gas flow, loss of
coolant, etc
 no need for arc voltage control
Plasma welding torch
Torch
body
Tungsten
electrode

Water cooled
copper nozzle

Shielding
gas cup
Plasma welding torch

 operates at very high


temperatures 
cooling is mandatory
 heavy and bulky 
limitations on hand
held torches
 alignment, setting,
concentricity of
tungsten electrode
needs precision
Gases for plasma welding
•Argon for carbon steel, titanium, zirconium, etc
•Hydrogen increase heat  Argon + (5-15%)
Hydrogen for stainless steel, Nickel alloys,
Copper alloys
•Argon + Helium mixtures (min 40%) give a
hotter arc but reduces torch life
•Shielding gases as for
TIG
•shielding gas flow
rate 10-30 l/min
•back purge as for TIG
(also for keyhole)
PAW advantages
 improved arc stability at very low currents
 greater energy concentration  higher welding speed
 narrower beads  less distortion (as much as 50%)
 tungsten electrode is recessed inside the torch  no
danger of tungsten inclusions
 increased torch stand-off distance makes the weld pool
much easy to control
 arc column is cylindrical  easier out-of-position welding
 very deep penetration (keyhole)  reduced weld time
 square butt joint  reduced machining costs
 plasma gas flushing through the open keyhole helps
remove gases
PAW disadvantages
 narrow constricted arc little tolerance for joint
misalignment
 manual plasma torches are heavier than TIG torches
 difficult to manipulate
 more complex equipment than TIG  expensive
 except Al alloys, keyhole plasma is restricted to the
flat position
 torch must be well maintained for consistent
operation  costly
Plasma cutting
•no need to promote
oxidation  no preheat
•works by melting and
blowing and/or
vaporisation
•gases: air, Ar, N2, O2, mix
of Ar + H2, N2 + H2
•air plasma promotes
oxidation  increased
speed but special
electrodes need
•shielding gas - optional
•applications: stainless
steels, aluminium and thin
sheet carbon steel
Plasma cutting
Plasma cutting features
Advantages Limitations
•Can be used with a wide •Limited to 50mm (air
range of materials plasma) thick plate
• High quality cut edges • High noise especially
can be achieved when cutting thick
• Narrow HAZ formed sections in air

• Low gas consumable • High fume generation


(air) costs when cutting in air

• Ideal for thin sheet and • Protection required


stack cutting from the arc glare

• Low fume (underwater) • High equipment and


process consumable costs
Plasma cutting quality
•tapered cut up to 6°
•rounded top edge
•gas swirl can reduce taper up to 2°
•very smooth surface finish except
aluminium and thick materials
•dross is minimal
•kerf width wider than oxy fuel cutting
•HAZ width inverse to cutting speed
•no time for chromium carbides to form
•2000 and 7000 series aluminium alloys are crack
sensitive at surface
Plasma cutting equipment
Plasma cutting equipment
•manual cutting - limited
to drag along
•machine cutting - stand
off close tolerances
•motion - CNC
•power source - cc
dropping characteristic
•need high OCV
•problems with bevels and
multiheads
•easy to perform
interrupted cutting
Plasma gouging

•lower arc stream


velocity
•gouge is bright and
clean
•virtually no post
cleaning required
•used mainly on
stainless steels and
non-ferrous materials

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