Abstract

Multi-material design has been increasingly used in the automotive industry for structural lightweighting. A novel resistance spot welding technique has been developed to join aluminium to steel with acceptable joint strength. However, aluminium to steel resistance spot welds can fail in either interfacial (IF) or pull-out (PO) fracture modes. In the present study, coupon-level tensile shear and coach peel samples are tested under quasi-static condition, and component-level T-joint structures are tested under impact load. Experimental results show that in the IF fracture mode, weld failure occurs due to the facture of the intermetallic layer, while in the PO fracture mode, weld failure occurs due to a combination of different mechanisms including through-thickness tearing of the weld nugget and possibly partial fracture of the intermetallic layer. In the finite element analysis, two force-based fracture criteria are implemented via mesh-independent connector element considering a general loading condition, and whichever fracture potential reaches unity first determines the fracture mode. The proposed method is validated by experiments and has the following features: firstly, it can capture the behaviour of fracture mode transitioning from IF to PO as weld diameter increases; secondly, it can simulate the maximum load and deformation at fracture; thirdly, it can indicate the global response and absorbed energy in impact analysis with reasonable accuracy. Furthermore, a distinct advantage of the model is that it is free of non-physical calibration. The parameters in the model are obtained from geometric and material properties of the weld directly. The developed method shows desirable performance and is potentially suitable for applications in large-scale automotive structural analysis and design.

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