Soldering and welding Flashcards

1
Q

Soldering vs welding process

A

Soldering is joining of metals by fusion of filler metal between them (glue!)

Welding is union of metal with or without filler metal (more like to fill in gap)

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2
Q

Temperature of soldering vs welding

A

Soldering takes place at temperature below solidus temperature of metals being joined. Both metals are solid. Only filler metal is molten, and filler metal has melting point less than 450ºC

Welding takes place at high temperature

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3
Q

How does strength of joint in soldered/welded metals compare to parent metals

A

Stronger, increased mechanical properties

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4
Q

Why is soldering rather than welding used for constructing dental appliances and joining ortho components

A

High temperature required for welding may result in distortion of casting

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5
Q

What is the effect on soldering of oxide that forms on surface of parent metal during heating

A

Oxide layer blocks interactions between solder and parent metal

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6
Q

Why is wettability of substrate by molten solder important

A

Allow molten solder to spread, otherwise weak

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7
Q

Requirements of soldering (4)

A

Surface must be clean and free of grease and residues

Surface of colour matte not glossy

Superficial roughness of surface to be soldered

Compatible with fluxes

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8
Q

What does flux do

A

Prevents re oxidation. Reduce oxides formed on surface

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9
Q

What are the 3 types of fluxes

A
  1. Surface protection
  2. Reducing agents
  3. Solvents
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10
Q

What are surface protection fluxes

A

Cover metal surface to prevent oxygen access. Oxides not formed

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11
Q

What are reducing agent fluxes

A

Reduce oxides and expose clean meta

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12
Q

What are solvent fluxes

A

Dissolve oxides and drive them away

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13
Q

What happens if too much flux is painted on

A

Flux remains trapped within the filler metal and weakens the joint

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14
Q

What happens if too little flux is painted on

A

Flux will burn off and there is more oxide than flux. Flux ineffective

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15
Q

Why must solder/filler metal have mechanical properties comparable to structures joined

A

Otherwise will become the weakest link and make whole structure weak

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16
Q

What temperature should solder metal flow at

A

Low temperature, usually 50ºC below solidus temperature of parent metals

17
Q

What is soft solder metal

A

Low fusion range 260ºC and below. Lack of corrosion resistance. Non dental uses

18
Q

What is hard solder metal

A

High fusion range. High mechanical strength and hardness. Technically brazing

19
Q

What is the function of anti flux

A

Confine the flow of solder

20
Q

What happens if solder gap is big

A

Strength is controlled by strength of solder

21
Q

What happens if solder gap is narrow

A

Strength is limited by flux inclusions and porosities due to limited flow of flux

22
Q

Why are organic fluxes unsuitable for flame soldering

A

Tend to char and impair solder flow