SANTOS, R. B. C.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/3960722864174263; SANTOS, Rafael Barbosa Carneiro dos.
Resumen:
The present work aims to investigate the corrosion resistance of austenitic
stainless steel coatings applied on carbon steel substrate via mechanized GTAW process
with the addition of cold wire (GTAW-MAF). The welds were carried out using AISI
317L steel wires with a diameter of 1.2mm as the filler metal. For the isolated welding
beads, a linear factorial design experiment was designed with three independent variables
(current, feed speed and electrode/part distance) and with the addition of central and axial
points (23+6+3), totaling 17 tests . The response variables analyzed were dilution (%),
wettability (°), height and width of beads (mm), selecting the three parameters with the
best operational feasibility to be used in the coating process. In the welding coatings
process, two techniques were used: with and without substrate preheating. Preheating
proved to be effective in reducing discontinuities between weld beads and it was possible
to develop a viable and replicable technique for the deposition of AISI 317L coating via
the GTAW-MAF process. It was found that the deposition process used provided coatings
with chemical composition similar to those of the addition material used and that the best
results in corrosion resistance and dilution were given when using welding currents above
220A, feed speed between 4m/min and 5m/min and electrode-to-part distance of 10mm.
The R2T2 coating showed good dilution results (10.38%), resistance to polarization 2.8x
greater in relation to the substrate, little presence of inclusions and good operational
regularity in the deposition of beads with low presence of discontinuities.