Abstract
The heat generated during the welding of stainless steel results in the oxidation of the surface that, apart from aesthetics, adversely affects its corrosion property too. This communication reports the successful removal of heat tint generated by the gas tungsten arc welding process off a stainless steel surface in addition to an improvement in its pitting corrosion resistance by exposure to the emission of a nanosecond pulsed fiber laser. The laser cleaning experiments, conducted with six different laser pulses having different temporal shapes and duration that varied from 20 to 1020 ns, revealed that removal of the weld heat tint was possible in all conditions provided the effective laser fluence exceeded a definite threshold value. This threshold value, in turn, was found to increase with an increase in pulse duration. The laser cleaned specimens were subsequently analyzed for surface morphology, roughness, and pitting corrosion resistance. The pitting corrosion resistance of the laser-treated specimens was compared with the as-welded specimens and welded specimens with heat tint removed using conventional methods like wire brush cleaning and chemical pickling. The superior quality of tint removal, improved pitting corrosion resistance, and the ease of noncontact operation indicates the significant potential of the fiber laser-based weld tint removal method to substitute the conventional mechanical or chemical cleaning methods currently in use in the manufacturing industry.
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