Abstract
Ultrasonic spot welding (USW) was employed to join AA7075-T6 and casting Al alloy A380. Under a constant welding power, the influence of the welding time duration (from 1 s to 3 s) on peak temperature, microstructure, hardness, and mechanical strength of the joints were studied. It was found that the peak temperature increased with welding time. A sound solid-state metallurgical bonding was obtained at the joint interface. The cracks occurred at the edge of the joints were eventually eliminated as the welding time increased. A layer of refined grains formed in A380 adjacent to the bonding line. Hardness reduction occurred in AA7075 at the joint interface and the degree of hardness reduction and the volume increased with the peak temperature. By increasing welding time, lap shear tensile tests show that the peak load increased from 5.3 kN to 6.55 kN. The corresponding interfacial shear strength ranged from 96.29 MPa to 99.72 MPa, lower than the shear strength of both base materials (331 MPa for AA7075 and 185 MPa for A380). All joint samples exhibited interfacial fracture after lap shear tensile testing, with a thin layer of A380 remnant attached to AA7075 at the center of the fractured surface.