Electron
beam welding is the fusing together of two or more materials using
a beam of high-velocity electrons. All rely on the properties
of electrons that permit them to be accelerated by an electrostatic
field.
In an electron beam welding machine, electrons are accelerated
to more than half the speed of light. The beam of high-velocity
electrons impinges upon the material to be welded where it is focused
to a minute spot by electromagnetic lenses. At this point, the kinetic
energy of the electrons is trans-formed into the thermal energy;
melting the material to form a fusion weld.
Electron beam welding overcomes the limitations of conventional
welding techniques. When designing and producing precision products,
conventional welding techniques present several draw-backs:
- distortion due to shrinkage
- low joint strength caused by excessive weld-heat input
- contamination of the weld zone due to impurities in the surrounding
atmosphere
- inability to weld many materials
- too much dependence on operator skill to keep the process under
control.
Electron
beam welding minimizes the distortion and shrinkage because of the
low total energy input to the workpiece. This low energy input is
possible because complete fusion occurs almost instantaneously due
to the high power density of the beam. When 7500 watts of power are
concentrated into a spot .010 inch in diameter, power density is 100,000
kilowatts/square inch and welding occurs at tremendous speeds. At
these speeds, heat does not travel from the weld zone to the surrounding
material, therefore, penetration in electron beam welding does not
depend on the thermal conductivity of the material being welded, as
with most other welding techniques.
Electron
beam welding typically produces a very narrow fusion zone which
has a depth to width ratio of approximately 15 to 1. Fusion zones
of an electron beam weld and a conventional weld are compared in
the figure. The energy input to a weld is approximately proportional
to its cross-sectional area, so the energy requirement for electron
beam welding is 4 percent of that required by other fusion welding
processes.
Because electron beam welding takes place in a vacuum of 10-4
Torr or greater (gas molecules scatter an electron beam), contaminaton
or oxidation of the workpiece is virtually eliminated.
The high purity of the electron beam welding process permits welding
reactive materials such as tungsten which are very sensitive to
oxidation at high temperatures. Parts are joined without generating
oxides or introducing fluxes and other residues. The purity of the
material during welding fusion s higher than that of the parent
material due to the "vacuum melting" that takes place during the
process.
Repeatability and reliability are key-notes of the electron beam
welding process. Once the machine power settings have been established
for a weld, the same weld can be repeated without variation in quality.
Weld location is precisely controlled within .005 of an inch through
the use of 40X visual optical system so that weld integrity is guaranteed.
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