1. Introduction
High-Strength Steels (HSS) belong to modern metals used in a lot of branches of the industry concerning their mechanical properties, such as ultimate tensile strength and yield stress, which are higher compared to typical structural materials [
1,
2]. Among them, the following material types can be indicated: Strenx [
1,
3], Docol [
4,
5], Amstrong Ultra [
6] and Optim QC [
7]. Their application is very wide, and it is selected based on comparing the value of stress due to operational conditions and mechanical parameters at microstructure features [
1,
2]. Therefore, they are employed for manufacturing different components called: car bodies, stringers [
8], frames [
9], bumper reinforcement and door beams [
5], Rear Underrun Protective Device [
1,
10], booms [
6,
7], platform [
8], tippers and aerial platforms [
6].
Until now, unalloyed steel with a minimum yield strength of 355 MPa and minimum impact strength KV-20 = 27 J was used for the construction of the container part of the container-type vehicle [
11]. Due to low strength, the walls of the containers were massive, with a thickness of up to 5 mm. Recently, attempts have been made to use high-strength steel (e.g., S960 grades) for the construction of containers, which has a strength of 2.5 times greater, which makes it possible to significantly reduce the thickness of the container wall, and thus the entire weight of the container [
12]. This is very important in transport, as reducing the weight of the container will allow you to carry more loads. It is a very economical solution [
13]. Worth noticing, the production process for elements made of HSS materials is very different, and it can be conducted using welding, screwing, or bolting techniques. Moreover, in the case of the last connection methods, the sub-components used for the joining have certificates, while the quality of the first one depends on the qualifications of the welding group. This problem is considered by a lot of research teams [
9,
14], which examined parameters of the joining technique or modified ones applying additional sub-elements such as micro-jet cooling device [
15,
16] or hybrid welding process [
17,
18]. These efforts are transferred for various kinds of high-strength steel focusing on the S960MC [
15,
17,
18], which is an attractive kind of metal because it is produced in a lot of forms such as sheets, tubes and plates [
1,
6]. The Strenx 960MC is very good weldable, cold-formed and machined by cutting. Therefore, typical applications are represented by advanced lifting devices such as mobile cranes and lighter transport solutions and components [
3,
6]. They indicate the steel and their joints can be subjected to various types of loading, including: static and cyclic, which influence mechanical parameters important for engineering practice and inspection stages for a correct designing and service life, respectively. Therefore, different tests are used for determining the steel reaction [
19]. They follow the behavior of the welded zones with different filler materials up to fatigue limits indicating its value close to 100 MPa at a very narrow stress range represented by the following values 100–300 MPa, [
18]. Moreover, taking these data, differences between the role of metal used for filling can be easily indicated. Besides fatigue tests, hardness experiments are still used as the fundamental probe for assessing the quality of a welded joint made of the S960MC steel [
18]. This method is very helpful at the calibration of the welding process as well as the hybrid joining technique. Moreover, the technique is very typical; nevertheless, some differences between welded regions can be easily indicated [
18]. This type of results enables to follow concludes on the quality of joint if sufficient numbers of measurement regions are collected [
20]. This approach can also be evidence in [
17,
21], which presents data from micro-hardness tests [
17] on the joint manufactured at the Gas Metal Arc Weld (GMAW). The same sentence, as it has been formulated in the case of the hardness probe, can be addressed to impact test, which has enabled indicating advantages of the laser and laser welding process, expressed by the following values of accumulated energy reaching 57 J and 49 J, respectively. The same kind of test was also used for differencing features of the S960MC welds produced by various types of the process [
22]. In this case, the experiment type was very effective and has enabled us to distinguish variations of impact toughness. Some authors [
23] have used a combined approach such as fracture toughness results to predict fatigue endurance of a weld of the S960MC. They have presented a fatigue curve at stress value close to data shown in [
18], indicating good agreement between the method and experimental efforts.
Welding S690 steel grades is not easy. For making joints with a thickness of about 6 mm, it is absolutely necessary to use preheating and control the inter-stitch temperature. Joints made of these steels have low fatigue strength and low relative elongation. The softening of the HAZ (Heat Affected Zone) is one of the major issues of HSS welding [
24,
25]. There is no information in the technical literature on the fatigue strength of welded joints made of S960 steel grade. Thin-walled joints are a major welding problem, as they can be prone to welding cracks.
Pipe joints made of HSS steel with variable wall thickness were tested. It has been shown that a thick-walled joint has better fatigue properties than a thin-walled joint due to the reduction of the stress concentration factor. In fact, the presence of fatigue cracks or otherwise induced defects in such connections poses a potential safety risk to the structure. The authors found the possibility of cold cracks, especially in joints of greater thickness, where they recommend using preheating. It is also related to the higher hydrogen content in the joint obtained without preheating [
26,
27].
In welding AHSS (Advanced High Strength Steel) steels, there is a need to modify the technology to improve the strength and plastic properties of the joint. This is due to the slightly different metallographic structure of the weld and the base material (expanded ferrite and martensite in the weld). For this purpose, for the first time, it was decided to test the micro-jet cooling method during S960MC welding (research gap), which can lead to the fragmentation of the joint structure, which is related to the improvement of the mechanical properties of the joint. For the first time, fatigue tests of such a joint were performed, which are the most important information leading to the verification and validation of the new design and technology.
The aim of the article was to develop a material and technological solution enabling the production of a thin-walled structure made of difficult-to-weld steel, characterized by the best mechanical properties. Therefore, in the article, it was decided to very carefully check the possibility of MAG (Metal Active Gas) welding S960MC steel using various parameters, materials and welding methods. It was also decided to check the possibility of welding S960MC steel to obtain the best mechanical properties. It was decided to test three electrode wires with a variable content of carbon and other alloying elements, and it was decided to test the use of two different shielding mixtures in the MAG welding process. Independently, it was decided to check the possibility of making a thin-walled structure of the S960MC steel joint with the use of micro-jet cooling, believing that this type of cooling would allow for the fragmentation of the dominant martensitic and ferritic structures. It was decided to perform numerous non-destructive and destructive tests to determine the most favorable welding and cooling parameters of the micro-jet, which allows the best mechanical properties of the joint to be obtained. Taking into account the results discussed above, the two research paths for examining the S960MC weld are evidenced. The first one is represented by typical experiments such as hardness and fatigue tests but at a narrow range of experimental procedures, while the second manner is expressed by complex approach, i.e., theoretic-experimental. From the practical and scientific point of view, these manners are suited for selected loading regimes, without details on the energetic aspects of the fatigue process as well as cases at high value of stress, including an increase of amplitude related to the fractured moment. The most important point of the research was to check the fatigue strength after welding S960MC steel. For this purpose, the size of the samples was specially designed, and fatigue strength tests were performed on very sensitive equipment.
In addition to the use of micro-jet cooling, the type of shielding gas plays an important role. Only the use of the Ar–CO2 mixture allows obtaining the correct joints. Further research focused on the evaluation of joints made with three different welding wires. M21 (Ar-18% CO2) cover and micro-jet cooling were always used. Tensile and fatigue tests were performed. The influence of the selection of the electrode wire on the mechanical properties of the joint was analyzed. The wires had a comparable chemical composition but differed slightly in carbon content. It was believed that the carbon content of the wire could affect the mechanical properties of the joint: both tensile strength and fatigue strength.
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. The Results of Non-Destructive Tests
Non-destructive test (NDT) results are presented in
Table 4. The results of NDT tests allow for a preliminary assessment of the quality of the weld. They expressed differences in the weld quality and indicate the NDT is very important for determining the quality of the zone examined because defects such as cracks can be evidenced.
Based on the results of non-destructive testing, the samples in
Table 4 were marked as “
✓”—positive and “
×”—negative. Examples of non-destructive testing results are shown in
Figure 5 and
Figure 6.
Figure 5 shows a positive result recorded for sample UXm3. The quality of the sample was on level B. No cracks and welding incompatibilities were found in the analyzed joint.
Figure 6 shows a negative result. The result was obtained for sample UXm1, which is characterized by welding incompatibilities.
MAG welding in CO
2 shield is more oxidizing than welding in an Ar-18% CO
2 shield. Welding in a CO
2 shield corresponds to the oxygen content in the weld at the level of 500 ppm, which translates into the larger size of non-metallic inclusions that may initiate cracks. Welding in the Ar–CO
2 mixture shield is less oxidizing; it leads to the formation of smaller non-metallic inclusions that may, to a lesser extent, cause cracks in the joint. The classification of welding processes in terms of the oxygen content in the weld and its justification was presented in 1999 [
29,
30].
Based on the analysis of the table data, it can be noticed that the M21 mixture (Ar + 18% CO
2) is much better than CO
2. From the analysis of the results presented in
Table 4, it follows that the test was carried out correctly; the evaluation of the tests is positive only in some cases when micro-jet cooling was not too intense and not too weak. For further tests (destructive test—DT), only those joints that met these requirements were taken into account:
Therefore, samples with the following determinations were taken into account (UNm3, UNm4, EDm3, Edm4, UXm3, UXm4 and UNc4, EDc3).
3.2. Data from the Bending and Hardness Tests
The test results of bending tests are summarized in
Table 5. The process was correct only with medium-power micro-jet cooling because no cracks and other disconformities were found in the samples tested. It reflected the high-quality level of the joint, and it was confirmed in comparison to the regimes of the PN-EN ISO 5817 standard [
31] on a crack length ≥ 0.5 mm at the highest requirement. Sample section dimension: 2 mm × 20 mm.
The bending tests confirmed that after welding with micro-jet cooling, it is possible to achieve joints with good plastic properties, as measured by the absence of cracks. In addition to the use of micro-jet cooling, the type of shielding gas plays an important role. Only the use of the Ar–CO2 mixture allows obtaining the correct joints.
3.3. Metallographic Examination and Hardness
Microstructure observations were carried out on the Neophot 32 light microscope (Carl Zeiss Jena, Jena, Germany). The structure is dominated by martensite and ferrite.
Figure 7 shows the structure observed in the UXm3 sample. Generally, martensite and coarse-grained ferrite were observed.
Only the application of micro-jet cooling after MAG welding made it possible to obtain more fragmented phases: martensite and ferrite (shown in
Figure 8). This is due to micro-jet cooling during welding, which limits phase growth during the austenitic transformation. Other authors also draw attention to the possibility of grain fragmentation because of the use of micro-jet cooling [
28,
32].
After microscopic observation, it was decided to perform hardness tests. It was made for the same samples. The results are presented in
Table 6.
The table data shows that a more favorable and even distribution of hardness in all tested zones is for a joint made with micro-jet cooling.
3.4. The Steel and Its Micro-Jet Cooled Joint at Different Welding Wire in a Static Test
S960MC steel appears as the material having elastic-plastic with hardening and unstable regions (
Figure 9). The proportion between ultimate tensile strength (UTS) and yield stress (YS) reached the value of 1.11, expressing the small distance between the mechanical parameters considered. From the practical point of view, this feature indicates an inspection of the element made of this kind of steel if the stress has equaled yield stress during operation. Another important sign in the S960MC behavior under tensile stress is evidenced in a region of the unstable section, which dominates in 70% comparing to the elastic and elastic-plastic with hardening zones. This informs the steel can carry loading at a long moment after a value of stress exceeds ultimate tensile strength. Taking the long unstable section, the steel can be easy to diagnose at high values of stress without any difficulties and risks for researchers, engineers and diagnostics teams. This sentence is also confirmed by a value of stress at the steel rupture, i.e., 600 MPa, indicating two times difference comparing to the value of ultimate tensile strength and distancing the fracture up to a value of a relative elongation of 9.5%. The behavior of the steel follows advantages concerning the application of this kind of material in a tri-axial stress state because the necking effect is significant, and this prevents brittle cracking.
The advantages of the S960MC steel are captured at tensile stress conducted at various types of control signals represented by the following velocity values of displacement, strain and stress signals such as 1 mm/min, 0.08 L/min and 117 MPa/min, respectively (
Figure 9). As it can be noticed, the stress–strain curves follow the same course, which expresses insensitivity of the steel tested on the type of tensile signal and the time up to fracture related to the control kind used. This enables to sentence the mechanical parameters of the steel are stable for the wide range of loading signals and their parameters, extending the application of the material examined to operational conditions with different velocity diverse by even 10 times.
The steel behavior as a parent material was also dominant compared to welded joints manufactured by the micro-jet cooling technique (
Figure 10). The most differences were visible for all stress parameters, placing the steel as a very attractive material compared to its weld. Nevertheless, the data collected for the micro-jet cooled weld enable to indicate advantages of the joint at the loading type considered. As a first, an attractive value of ultimate tensile strength of 650 MPa at all welding wires used can be evidenced. A second feature of the weld is related to a value of relative elongation because, at the fracture, the parameter reached 12.5% for the EDFK wire. This result and a range of the unstable regions enable to formulate sentences related to the application in a tri-axial stress state, i.e., the micro-jet cooled weld behavior after the necking effect is predictable and will be the same for all joints considered. No influence of the welding wire type on the joint’s response was also visible in the elastic and elastic-plastic regions, following almost the same values of stress–strain.
The results from tensile tests collected using mini-specimens have enabled us to follow the stress–strain relationship and mechanical parameters of the S960MC steel. This kind of specimen was also very sufficient at determining the influence of a control signal as displacement, stress, and strain. Literature [
17,
19,
20] indicates mechanical properties of weld for S960MC without any details on a specimen shape and dimensions [
17,
20] or presents a bigger specimen, i.e., having 1000 mm length [
19]. As it was obtained, the steel tested was not sensitive to the signal type used. The mini-specimen has supported examining the small weld, represented by the width of 0.5 mm under static loading, giving a tensile curve. Comparing data from the experiment on the base metal and welds has allowed us to distinguish differences in responses of the regions tested on static loading. Nevertheless, it is worth noting that the applications of small specimens require more attention during the tuning process because the measurement zone with a mounted extensometer is very close to the grips, which at inducing a testing machine can cause total damage to a sensor.
3.5. Fatigue Response of the Steel and the Micro-Jet Cooling Weld under Increasing and Constant Stress Amplitude
The behavior of the base material was expressed by hysteresis loops related to the energy dissipation as a dominant response of the material tested on the cycles used (
Figure 11a). The first section of the relationship followed the elastic response of the material tested as an effect of hardening due to cyclic loading, while the second one was connected with permanent deformation. As it can be noticed, this feature occurred up to the cycle before the fracture. Moreover, the welds were loaded within the value of stress from the range between yield stress and ultimate tensile strength, and any hysteresis loops were not visible (
Figure 11b–d). In this case, the stress–strain relationship has followed ratcheting up to fracture. This was very significant because it increased very rapidly before the fracture. As it can be noticed, this effect was the same for all cases of the welds considered, indicating the behavior of welds manufactured at the micro-jet cooling technique is insensitive to the type of welding wires used.
The fatigue response of the base material under the increasing value of the stress amplitude was analyzed concerning the courses of total energy (
Figure 12 and
Figure 13) because it demonstrates data representing loading signal (stress, force) and response signal (strain, elongation, displacement). The values of the physical magnitude were followed from the tests’ beginning up to fracture, focusing on the last 50-th cycles directly related to the degradation of the parent material and the welds. This quantity was calculated basing on features of the Wave Matrix Instron software. It follows the total work performed on the specimen tested [
33]. The values of force and displacement were used for calculations of the energy value. This parameter was followed since the start of the test. The software calculates total energy by continuously integrating force with displacement, using the trapezoidal rule [
33].
The results collected in the test considered have expressed the same tendency of the values of total energy independently on the region tested, represented by an exponential relationship (
Figure 12a and
Figure 13a). Differences were visible in courses of the physical quantity, expressing not the same mechanical resistance of the welds on the type of loading applied,
Figure 13a. They indicated the weld manufactured at micro-jet cooling technique and EDFK 1000 welding wires had obtained the smallest energy values while the biggest one was represented by results of the micro-jet weld at the NiMoCr wire. The same arrangement of the results was observed on the data directly related to the fracture stages of the regions tested (
Figure 13b,c), values of the number of cycles, as well as the time to fracture. In the case of the base material, the value of cycles before the fracture reached 2580 at 258 s (
Figure 12b), while for the welds, the following values were obtained: 2000 at 200 s (EDFK 1000 welding wire), 2800 at 280 s (Union NiMoCr welding wire) and 2900 at 290 s (Union X96 welding wire) (
Figure 13a).
The results from the fracture stage in the form of the relationship of total energy versus the number of cycles have finally expressed the mechanical resistance of the welds examined (
Figure 13c). The smallest one was noticed in the case of the micro-jet cooled weld with EDFK 1000 wire, and the biggest one was observed at the weld produced by the same technique but with the Union X96 wire, reaching the following values, respectively: 2053 and 2999 cycles (
Table 7). This result strongly corresponds with the data presented in
Figure 13a, which arranges the courses of the total energy in the same order. Some details on the behavior of the region tested can be captured based on the fracture zones. As it can be noticed in the photos presented in
Figure 13c, the brittle cracking was the dominant feature of the weld at EDFK 1000; the brittle plastic was related to the weld at Union X96; the plastic represented the behavior of the NiMoCr joint. Nevertheless, any relationships were not observed at the comparison of the values of yield stress, ultimate tensile strength and the number of cycles connected with the fracturing of the tested joints (
Figure 14a,b). Some information can be collected based on values of total energy and stress at fracture (
Figure 14c,d). This is presented by the proportion of the physical quantity, which arrangements the welds with the EDFK 1000 and Union X96 welding wires as the joints with the same and the lowest mechanical resistance of the loading applied, while the weld of the Union NiMoCr wire become the strongest one from the joint examined.
The results from the tests under increasing stress amplitude were used for selecting the weld for determining the Wöhler curve. For this case, the joint with the Union X96 welding wire as the weakest region welded was tested under cyclic stress at the range of 650 MPa–100 MPa. Data collected from the fatigue experiment are presented in the next sub-chapter.
Fatigue tests at increasing stress amplitude defined by the yield stress and ultimate tensile strength as well as a time have enabled us to distinguish differences in behavior of the welds having very similar tensile characteristics. For this case, the values of the total energy were also significant because they divided into two sections from the beginning of the test up to cycles before and directly at the fracture, giving more information on the regions’ decohesion. This kind of test has allowed us to reach differences in fracture regions, giving more details to assess the mechanical resistance of the weld tested. Values of total energy have supported the analysis on the weld quality expressing the joints response on the cyclic loading. Their comparison with the maximum value of stress of the control signal has enabled to indicate the joints for both welding wires (EDFK 1000 and Union X96) expressed the same proportion, even though the stress levels applied as well as the number of cycles to fracture were significantly different by of 99 MPa and 946 cycles, respectively. Concerning the assessment of the weld quality, the following sentence can be formulated: the joints were manufactured at different welding wires, but nevertheless, they have a very similar reaction to the fatigue process. Taking these results into account, the strongest and weakest joints were possible to be indicated, arranging as of NiMoCr weld, EDFK 1000 and X96 welds.
3.6. Results from Tests of the Micro-Cooled Weld under Constant Stress Amplitude
The results from the experiments under stress cycles are represented by variations of total energy (
Figure 15a), the proportion of total energy to stress (
Figure 15b), fracture regions as both parts of specimen directly after cracking (
Figure 16) and as the zones on a perpendicular cross-section of the specimens (
Figure 17) as well as the Wöhler curve (
Figure 18).
They show a course of total energy up to fatigue limit at values of the number of cycles (
Figure 15a). As it can be noticed at the earlier stage of the course up to 5 × 10
5, the maximum value of total energy is represented by 325 J. For the further section reaching 1 × 10
6 cycles, the value of 375 J limits, while at the fatigue limit (determined by 2 × 10
6), an increase of the total energy was expressed by 95 J giving 420 J. If values of total energy and stress are divided then the quantity of Jouls per MegaPascal can be calculated (
Figure 15b). This proportion enables to follow the relationship between the physical quantities. In this case, a non-linear tendency was evidenced, indicating the stress values do not have the same influence on the weld fracturing. Moreover, the values of energy can be easily connected with the values of stress (
Table 8), covering more practical information for inspection groups. They can be used in comparison with the values of stress as well as total energy from the experiment and captured at operational conditions for predicting the lifetime of components made of the steel grade weld with similar mechanical parameters. The total energy to stress can be used at the current inspection without details on the earlier stage.
The role of the stress level in the weld degradation was determined on fracture zones represented by the general view on the specimens after the test (
Figure 16) and exhibited by the view focused on the whole region of degradation (
Figure 17). The photos were selected for presenting changes in the fracture regions and for better analysis of the zone degradation at various values of stress. Using them, we can follow the material degradation in a 3D coordinate system and compare it with the orientation of the measured zone. Some differences in the weld degradation due to cyclic loading are visible on the views on both parts of specimens directly after tests (
Figure 16). They are expressed by the angular orientation of fracture zones at the stress level of 400–600 MPa, which indicates shear and axial components of stress for the weld decohesion. Comparing these data, a reduction of the angular orientation of the damage region is noticed, indicating the role of shear stress in the fracturing lowers with decreasing the stress value. This is better visible from the cross-section view (
Figure 17).
The effect of the booth types of stress in the tested region degradation was also visible on the photos taken with the macro-photography technique (
Figure 17). In this case, the same presentation concept for the following decohesion characteristics as was taken for the immediately fracture specimen was used. Using this approach, zone details in relation to fracture mechanics may be easier to collect. The multi-planar cracking was noticed on the perpendicular cross-sections as a major feature of all regions inspected independently of the stress level applied. Nevertheless, the proportion between the angular and horizontal sections of the damage zones was dependent on the values of stress, i.e., the horizontal part becomes more significant with decreasing the stress value (
Figure 17g3).
The analysis of the fracture region represented by both zones, i.e., horizontal and angular, enables the selection of the area to be the first for damage occurrence. In this case, the horizontal section of the region considered plays the role of the initial damage. The second area that is damaged further and directly related to the final stage of specimen lifetime is represented by the angular region. This kind of data follows the micro-cooled welded region expresses a mixed (brittle-plastic) cracking at cyclic tensile stress arraigning the axial stress at the beginning of the fracture and shear stress at the final stage of fatigue. In comparison to the good plastic properties of the micro-cooled joint, these results reflect as follows: the weld degradation at plastic cracking is dominant under a stress value exceeding yield stress (530 MPa), while at a smaller one, the brittle behavior appeared.
An analysis of the Wöhler curve has enabled us to select stages with the number of cycles for applications or inspections of the weld tested at a wide range of stress values (
Figure 18). For this case, the diagram can be divided at the following regions determined by the stress value and loading cycles: from 650 MPa to 400 MPa at 3 × 10
4–9 × 10
4 cycles; from 400 MPa to 100 MPa at 9 × 10
4–2 × 10
6 cycles. This enables to formulate as follows: the weld expresses hardening due to cyclic tensile stress close to the ultimate tensile strength reaching the lifetime limited by the 3 × 10
4. Moreover, the value of fatigue limit can be indicated as 100 MPa, which unfortunately does not express an attractive level for application under cyclic loading at very restricted operational regimes. This kind of result was very similar to data collected by the authors of [
19]. Nevertheless, their data did not follow the function proposed as it was obtained in the paper. A comparison of these test results shows that they are complementary due to the different characteristics of the zones containing the welds and can be used for extending the knowledge in the S960MC weld behavior.
Concluding results from tests on the Wöhler curve worth noticing are that this kind of data can be analyzed not only at variations stress versus a number of cycles but also at changes of total energy. This approach collects the relationship between control and response signal, i.e., stress and strain, respectively, supporting results represented by one of the mentioned physical quantities. This kind of data can be used for modifying models for predicting lifetimes as well as elaborating on new ones. Fracture analysis is the stage of the fatigue test for analysis of fracture mechanics due to the type of loading applied. This follows the orientation of a fracture plane compared to a loading direction as well as details related to brittle or brittle-plastic cracking. The first mentioned feature of the region subjected to observation should be captured directly after a specimen fracturing without unmounting the tested object from the grips of the testing machine, while the second one’s details are obtained from observations of a fracture plane from various directions. As it was evidenced in the photos of the fracture regions of the weld, the degradation mechanism was related to stress state components, i.e., the shear stress becomes more significant in the weld degradation with an increasing stress level becoming from a value close to the yielding point.