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Rotary Inertia Friction Welding of Dissimilar High- Strength 422 Martensitic Stainless Steel and 4140 Low Alloy Steel for Heavy-Duty Engine Piston Fabrication

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Welding Journal
Publication Date
Page Numbers
88 to 93
Volume
104
Issue
3

AISI 422 martensitic stainless steel with superior high-temperature performance (oxidation resistance and strength) is under evaluation for replacing current heavy-duty piston crown materials, AISI 4140 martensitic steel and microalloyed steel (MAS) 38MnSiVS5, to fabricate a multi-material piston (Refs. 1, 2). This multi-material piston concept further improved power density and fuel economy by allowing heavy-duty diesel engines to operate at higher temperatures and pressures (Ref. 3). Joining AISI 422 steel piston crowns with AISI 4140 steel piston skirts is a key manufacturing step for this multi-material piston. However, the significant differences in strength, elevated temperature flow stress, alloy chemistry, and temper resistance between these two martensitic steels cause some weldability issues (cracking) and metallurgical challenges (alloying element migration/segregation) when using conventional fusion-based welding processes (Refs. 4–6). Rotary inertia friction welding (RIFW), a solid-state welding process, has been the preferred method to join 4140 crowns to 4140 skirts (and MAS crowns to MAS skirts) in high-volume production of current heavy-duty diesel engine pistons. It has been used to join these two materials with relatively comparable alloy chemistry to fabricate pistons with MAS skirts and 4140 crowns. Meanwhile, RIFW has also been a preferred method of dissimilar metal welding (Refs. 7, 8). However, RIFW of dissimilar high-strength martensitic steels has yet to be widely pursued. The interfacial microstructure complexities created by the thermomechanical process and highly nonequilibrium phase transformations during RIFW are a significant challenge for understanding and predicting their joining behavior and have not been reported in detail. In this work, defect-free AISI 422 steel-AISI 4140 multi-material pistons were successfully fabricated using the RIFW process. The interfacial microstructure and mechanical properties of dissimilar 422/4140 steel RIFW in the as-welded condition were experimentally studied in detail. The results provide critical baseline information for understanding RIFW mechanisms and guiding subsequent postweld heat treatment (PWHT) practice.