Abstract

In previous works, it has been found out that the electrode displacement in resistance spot welding has a high potential to be used as a measurement factor to monitor joint quality and to subsequently optimize the welding parameters. By extracting characteristic points in the displacement curve, it is possible to create and evaluate different parameter sets and to predict the formation of expulsion. These characteristic points include for example the maximum displacement of the electrodes, the time of the maximum displacement, the indentation displacement in the weld and hold time, or the velocity of the electrodes. In previous work, it was already shown that the indentation displacement showed satisfying results in predicting the nugget diameter for a press hardened 22MnB5 + AS150 under laboratory conditions. Based on that, a newly derived methodology for using the electrode displacement in monitoring a resistance spot weld process is shown for a galvanized dual-phase steel CR440Y780T-DP GI50/50-U. This methodology combines the knowledge of previous research and is split into three steps: the detection of manufacturing discontinuities, the evaluation of expulsion, and the monitoring of the nugget diameter. For this, the electrode velocity at the beginning of the process and the indentation displacements in the weld and hold time are being used to evaluate the resistance spot welding process.

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