Corrosion Resistance of Gas Shielded Metal Arc Welds with E-coat

971008

02/24/1997

Event
SAE International Congress and Exposition
Authors Abstract
Content
Gas shielded metal arc welding is generally applied to automobile chassis parts. However, the weld parts with the E-coat show poor corrosion resistance. Therefore, the corrosion mechanism of the weld parts was investigated. The results found two reasons why the weld parts corroded faster than the non weld parts:(1)inadequate phosphating (2)defects in the E-coat. After detailed investigation, it was clarified that the major cause of poor corrosion resistance was the defects in the E-coat caused by slags formed on the surface of the weld bead. Therefore the amount of slag has to be decreased to improve the corrosion resistance. The effect of shielding gas composition on the amount of slag was then investigated. In the case of Ar and oxidizing gas mixture, the corrosion resistance improved as the oxidizing gas content decreased. This was due to the reduction of slags. In the case of Ar+CO2 mixture, one to five percent of CO2 was shown to be an optimum composition for the shielding gas, because over one percent of CO2 was required for stable arc welding.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/971008
Pages
9
Citation
Takahashi, M., Uchihara, M., Sakoda, A., Ueki, M. et al., "Corrosion Resistance of Gas Shielded Metal Arc Welds with E-coat," SAE Technical Paper 971008, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/971008.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Feb 24, 1997
Product Code
971008
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English