Welding Gases

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Basics

  • Most modern forms of welding use some form of Shield Gas to protect the Weld Pool from the atmosphere
  • In the simplest form this is a pure Inert Gas
  • In some instances, various aspects of the weldment can be modified via using a gas mixture, often with a Reactive Gas
    • In the older terminology (Pre-GMAW ), there was Metal Inert Gas (MIG) and Metal Active Gas (MAG)

How They are Utilized

List

Pure Gases

Argon

  • Used in all GTAW (short of potentially in conjunction with gases such as Helium) and nearly all non-ferrous GMAW welds,

CO2

  • Used for carbon, and some low allow steels

Helium

  • Conducts heat Better than
  • Thus used for a "Hotter Arc"
  • Sometimes used with thick non-ferrous metals, and highly heat conductive metals like aluminum and copper which rapidly carry heat away from the Weld Pool and thus require more heat to achieve a good weld
  • However it floats away from the weld pool, and thus requires more gas usage
  • Also very' expensive, and comparatively scarce (See Peak Helium / World Helium Reserves / Helium Production )

Nitrogen

Gas Mixes

Argon-Oxygen

Argon-Helium

Argon-Helium-CO2

Argon-Carbon Dioxide

  • Often referred to as "75-25' since it is 75% argon and 25% carbon dioxide
  • Cheaper than pure argon, and allows f

Sourcing

Production

References

  • Modern Welding Pages:
    • ~176 for GMAW Gases
    • ~246 for GTAW Gases
    • Grab specific quotes maube even, as of now it's just paraphrasing
      • The book doesn't really mention why gas mixtures do what they do, so some papers may be of use for that aspect

Internal Links

External Links