Comparative study of the main electromagnetic models applied to melt pool prediction with gas metal arc: Effect on flow, ripples from drop impact, and geometry
Journal article, 2022

The present work concerns the electromagnetic force models in computational fluid dynamics simulations of melt pools produced with electric arcs. These are commonly applied to gas metal arcs with metal transfer, in welding and additive manufacturing. Metal drop impact on the melt pool is thus included in this study. The electromagnetic force models applied in literature use either numerical solutions of Poisson equations or one of the two analytical models developed by Kou and Sun, or Tsao and Wu. These models rely on assumptions for which the effect on the melt pool predictions remains to be understood. The present work thoroughly investigates those assumptions and their effects. It has been supported by dedicated experimental tests that did provide estimates of unknown model parameters and validation data. The obtained results show that the assumptions that fundamentally distinguish these three models change the electromagnetic force, including the relation between its components. These changes, which can also be spatially non-uniform, are large. As a result, these models lead to significantly different recirculation flow pattern, thermal convection, melt pool morphology, bead dimensions, and free surface response to the metal transfer. We conclude by proposing conditions in which each of these models is
suited or questionable.

Kou and Sun mode

Molten pool

Tsao and Wu model

Gas metal arc

Free surface oscillation

Maxwell electromagnetic force model

Metal transfer

Author

Pradip Aryal

University West

Fredrik Sikström

University West

Håkan Nilsson

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Fluid Dynamics

Isabelle Choquet

University West

International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer

0017-9310 (ISSN)

Vol. 194 123068

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Production

Subject Categories

Manufacturing, Surface and Joining Technology

Fluid Mechanics and Acoustics

Infrastructure

C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational Science and Engineering)

DOI

10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2022.123068

More information

Latest update

11/23/2022