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EBW

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ELECTRON BEAM WELDING

Submitted by:
Ankit Saxena
PGMSE-136013

Submitted to:
Mr Harish Arya
Introduction

i. Electron Beam Welding is a


fusion welding process in
which a beam of high-velocity
electrons is applied to the
material to be joined.
ii. The work-piece melt as the
kinetic energy of the electrons
is transformed into heat upon
impact.
iii. The EBW process is well-
positioned to provide
industries with highest quality
welds and machine designs
that have proven to be
adaptable to specific welding
tasks and production Fig.1: Key hole penetration in EBW
environments.
Electron Beam?

i. In an electron beam
welder electrons are
“boiled off” as current
passes through filament
which is in a vacuum
enclosure.

ii. An electrostatic field,


generated by a negatively
charged filament and bias
cup and a positively
charged anode, accelerates
the electrons to about
50% to 80% of the speed
of light and shapes them
into a Beam.

Fig 2:Electron beam source for EB


disposal
How does the Process Work?
i. The electron beam gun has a tungsten
filament which is heated, freeing
electrons.

ii. The electrons are accelerated from the


source with high voltage potential
between a cathode and anode.

iii. The stream of electrons then pass


through a hole in the anode. The beam
is directed by magnetic forces of
focusing and deflecting coils.

iv. This beam is directed out of the gun


column and strikes the work piece. The
potential energy of the electrons is
transferred to heat upon impact of the
work piece and cuts a perfect hole at
the weld joint. Molten metal fills in
behind the beam, creating a deep
finished weld.
Steps Used in EBW process

Joint preparation.

Cleaning of work piece.

Fixturing of work piece.

De-magnetization of work piece.

Setting up work piece in chamber.

Pump down air form chamber.

Carry welding process.


Classification of EBW Machines

• High voltage • High vacuum • Conveyor machine


machine (U =150 machine • Clock system
kV) • Fine vacuum • All-purpose EBW
• Low voltage machine machine
machine • Atmospheric • Local vacuum
(U=60kV) machine (NV-EB machine
welding) • Mobile vacuum
machine
• Micro and fine
welding machine

By Accelerating By Machine
By pressure
Voltage concept
High vacuum machine Fine vacuum machine

Atmospheric machine (NV-


EB welding)
Machine Concept - Conventional EBW Clock System Machine
Plant
EBW Conveyor Machine
Comparison with different welding techniques
on the basis of Parameter
PARAMETER TIG PLASMA LASER EB

Power input to 2kW 4kW 4kW 5kW


W-P

Total power 3kW 6kW 50kW 6kW


used
Traverse speed 2mm/s 5.7mm/s 16mm/s 40mm/s

Positional Good Good Yes Require Requires


welding penetration penetration optics to move mechanism to
the beam move the beam

Distortion Nominal Nominal Small Minimum


shrinkage significant in V- significant in V- Minimum Minimum
shaped weld shaped weld
PARAMETER TIG PLASMA LASER EB

Special Normal light Normal light Safety Vacuum


process screening screening interlock chamber-ray
requirement against screen
misplaced
beam
reflection

Surface Underside Underside Very fine Ruffled swarf


geometry protrusion protrusion ripples on back face
Comparison of conventional weld and EB weld
i. EBW is suitable for a variety of difficult applications, such as welding
structures on which the reverse side of the butt is inaccessible ; gravity
welding of thin metal ; and welding in various spatial positions.

ii. This Provides a low level of over all heating of the structures ; and has the
ability to vacuumed the inner volume simultaneously, which is suitable for
sealing instruments. Because EBW is an automated process , the welded joint
quality is consistent .

iii. The process does not require shielding gases , tungsten electrodes , or edge
preparation for welding thick metal .

iv. Finally , it can be used to weld some joints that cannot be made by other
welding processes.
v. Compared with arc welding
processes, EBW improves joint
strength 15 per cent to 25 per
cent.

vi. It has a narrow heat-affected


zone(HAZ), which results in
lighter-weight products.

vii. Geometric shapes and dimensions


are highly stable, particularly
when it is used as a finish
operation.

viii. It eliminates oxide and tungsten


inclusion sand removes impurities.

ix. The weld metal has a fine


crystalline structure.
Graph showing areas of different welding processes on the plot of
feature size v/s power density.
Advantage of EBW
In Vacuum
a) Thin and thick plate welding (0,1 mm bis 300 mm).
b) Extremely narrow seams (t:b = 50:1).
c) Low overall heat input => low distortion =>Welding of completely processed
components.
d) High welding speed possible.
e) No shielding gas required.
f) High process and plant efficiency.
g) Material dependence, often the only welding method.
At atmosphere
a) Very high welding velocity.
b) Good gap bridging. No problems with reflection during energy entry into work
piece.
Disadvantage of EBW
In Vacuum
• Electrical conductivity of materials is required.
• High cooling rates => hardening => cracks.
• High precision of seam preparation.
• Beam may be deflected by magnetism.
• X-ray formation.
• Size of work piece limited by chamber size.
• High investment.
At Atmosphere

• X-ray formation.
• Limited sheet thickness (max. 10 mm).
• High investment.
• Small working distance.
Field of Application

Industrial areas

• Automotive industries
• Aircraft and space industries
• Mechanical engineering
• Tool construction
• Nuclear power industries
• Power plants
• Fine mechanics and electrical
• Industries
• Job shop
Material
• Almost all steels.
• Aluminium and its alloys.
• Magnesium alloys.
• Copper and its alloys.
• Titanium.
• Tungsten.
• Gold.
• Material combinations (e.g. Cu-steel, bronze-steel).
• Ceramics (electrically conductive).

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