The complex flow behavior of the metal around the stirring tool during welding directly determines the microstructural evolution, defect formation, and mechanical properties of the welded joint, and thus becomes the core physical process affecting welding quality and process stability. In this study, to characterize the three-dimensional material flow behavior of AZ31 magnesium (Mg) alloy during friction stir welding (FSW), conventional metallographic sectioning was adopted as the primary observation method, and copper foil was used as the marker material. The flow trajectories of the materials after welding were investigated via three configurations of the marker material. The results indicate that three typical characteristic zones exist along the vertical direction, which are the shoulder-affected zone (SAZ), the pin-affected zone (PAZ), and the swirl zone from top to bottom. Specifically, the material in the SAZ is dominated by laminar flow; the PAZ exhibits complex mixed-flow characteristics; while the swirl zone shows an obvious rotational flow pattern. Based on the principles of material mechanics and fluid mechanics, a force-flow coupled “simple flow model around a rotating cylinder” was proposed, which defines three flow modes corresponding to the different characteristic zones within the weld.
Wei et al. (Fri,) studied this question.