1. Introduction
In the recent decade, composite materials applications in transportation, medical equipment, sports equipment and electronics have increased tremendously. Industries that were, historically, depending mainly on metals, because of properties such as high strength, malleability and ductility, to manufacture the products have shifted to composite materials due lighter weight, enhanced strength and durability, high performance and reduced carbon emission[
1,
2]. In cars, a weight reduction of 10%, reduced fuel consumption by 3 – 7% with identical performance[
3]. Global international aviation’s CO
2 emission is being forecasted by International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) to grow by a 300% - 700% by 2050 and aircraft with composite architecture is expected to contribute to 15% to 20% CO
2 reduction by 2050[
4].
In multi material design (MMD) composite materials are joined together or with metallic materials. This is a strategy that has been employed especially in automotive and aviation industries which involves integration of different materials in creating lightweight structure designs with improved crashworthiness and reduced CO
2 emission[
5,
6].
Figure 1 shows the Mach-II lightweight vehicle Body in White (BiW) based on multi material design. Materials that are commonly used as lightweight materials are light alloys such as aluminium and magnesium, High Speed Steel (HSS) and composites[
5,
7,
8,
9]. The common joining technologies in multi material joining are fusion bonding or welding (fusion welding and solid-state welding), mechanical fasteners (bolting and riveting) and adhesive bonding [
10] as illustrated in
Figure 2.
Temporary joints which need disassembling and assembling of components use mechanical fasteners. As mechanical fasteners require holes to be drilled, these joints are prone to stress concentrations, which lead to reduced strength. The bolts and rivets further add the product weight affecting the lightweight design [
12,
13,
14,
15]. For permanent joints, either adhesive bonding or welding is used. Adhesive bonding involves extensive treatment of faying surfaces, depends on environmental factors, application temperature, curing time, type of adhesive and there is no universal adhesive to be used for all applications [
16,
17,
18,
19]. However, adhesive bonded joints showed higher joint stiffness, higher shear strength and better uniform load distribution compared to mechanically fastened joints or welded joints[
20,
21,
22].
The other permanent joint option is welding which can be divided into fusion welding and solid-state welding. Fusion welding for example Resistance Spot Welding (RSW), Arc Welding (AW) and Resistance Seam Welding (RSSEW) involves faying surfaces of base metals to be fused by heating to melting points, to form coalescence during welding. Solid-state welding such as Friction Welding (FW) and Ultrasonic Welding (USW) involves joining the faying surfaces of base metal without heating to melting point. There are also other welding processes that do not fall into both the above categories; namely Laser Beam Welding (LBW) and Induction Welding (IW). Unlike joining with mechanical fasteners and adhesive bonding, welding has limited ability in joining dissimilar metals and metal-polymer combination. This is due to joining mechanism involved, i.e, heating or melting workpieces with differences in thermal conductivity and coefficient of the thermal expansion [
23]. Furthermore, during solidification of the weld joints, intermetallic compounds (IMC) that are brittle, porosities and dendritic recrystallization will affect the integrity of the weld quality[
24]. Even though mechanical fasteners and adhesive bonding are suitable for dissimilar and composite materials[
18], welding process despite the above-mentioned limitations, are more suitable for process automation and faster process.
Spot welded joints are the common joints used in automotive industries. An automotive BiW generally will have around 2000 -5000 spot welds [
25,
26]. Traditionally, automotive BiWs when predominantly built using steel sheets, resistance spot welding (RSW) process was the preferred choices due to its inherent characteristics such as low cost as no filler is required for this process unlike the arc welding process, fast operation, and ease of being automated using robots[
27,
28,
29]. However, when the concept of light weight vehicles was introduced and multi material design was incorporated, aluminium, magnesium and Carbon Fiber Reinforced Polymer (CFRP) were spot welded with steel. RSW uses the material electrical resistance to generate heat at the faying surfaces of metals to be joined. Non-ferrous metals such as aluminium, copper and magnesium have a very high thermal and electrical conductivities compared to steel, therefore concentrating the heat at the faying surfaces for metal melting to happen was difficult. Hence joining these materials with steel using RSW was challenging[
30,
31,
32]. Welding aluminium with steel to form a dissimilar joint causes electrode deterioration and high energy consumption [
33]. RSW was not able to join CFRP with metal as the former is an insulator[
34].
Considering the limitations of the traditional RSW to join composite materials via spot welds, the process has been modified or new variants of the process were developed. Alternatively, the solid-state welding processes such as friction stir spot welding (FSSW) and ultrasonic spot welding (USW) and advance welding processes such as laser spot welding (LSW) were reported to have successfully spot-welded dissimilar materials to form composite/hybrid joints. This review paper will review recent studies in the different variants of spot-welding processes; RSW, FSSW, USW and LSW, used to form composite joints based on the following:-
- a)
welding mechanism,
- b)
weld characteristics,
- c)
advantages and drawbacks of the processes
To the best knowledge of the author, such a comprehensive, scientific and organised study on different types of spot-welding processes for joining composite materials have not been published. With these review paper, detailed, organised and latest information on different spot-welding techniques will be made available to researchers and the industries. The review is also intending to provide researchers with new directions of research areas which will contribute to successful joining of composite materials with good quality spot welds.
4. Advantages and Drawbacks of Processes
The variants of RSW have shown ability to spot weld composite joints. The inserts and interlayers used in RSW variants need to be resistive materials so that current can flow through these heating elements to generate heat. The metallic heating elements however might be relatively heavy, promote corrosion and create residual stress that create crack at the joint[
147]. Magnetically assisted RSW (MA-RSW) produced spot welds with higher tensile strength compared to conventional RSW, hence has been proposed to be integrated with the welding gun[
148]. Shunt current assisted RSW (SCA-RSW) and induction heat assisted RSW (IHA-RSW) techniques have the risk of overheating the polymer core in LITECOR®. SCA-RSW was also found not suitable for automation while the IHA-RSW, even though more effective in transferring heat to the weld zone compared to SCA-RSW, require proper placement of materials to be welded on the induction coil to prevent overheating of the polymer[
51].
Comparative study between FSSW and RSW to join aluminium alloys has reported that with optimum welding parameters, FFSW joints had higher tensile shear strength compared to strength of joints made with RSW[
149]. The FFSW has recently replaced RSW in the automotive industries to join Al alloy, steel alloy and polymer composites. Refill-FFSW even though gives improved weld strength compared to FFSW, the process is considered expansive and complex as the tool has three separate components that need to be controlled[
150]. In FFSW, the reduced weld strength is mainly due to the weld thinning, keyhole defects and hook defect[
151,
152]. Other variations in the FFSW reported to join metal-polymer composite joints are threaded hole friction stir spot welding (THFSSW)[
153,
154] and static shoulder friction stir spot welding (SSFSSW) or pinless friction stir spot welding (PFSSW) [
151,
155]. Study between RSW, FSSW, PFSSW and THFSSW (at times referred as pre-hole FSSW (PHFSSW)) showed, FFSW gives better weld strength and has more flexibility on joining aluminium alloys and polymer composites yet is far expensive compared to RSW as shown in
Figure 21 below.
USW can be used for mass production because of its high ability for automation. Recently, there has been a shift of interest on FSSW and high-power USW to replace RSW. However, only small components can be spot welded with USW due to the limits in power of the machines. Different clamping are required for different components and this increases production cost and inconvenience when used in manufacturing[
146]. Compared to RSW and FSSW, USW has even shorter welding cycles, less energy consumption and higher efficiency[
86,
141]. LSW and RSW are very similar in process as both processes involve heating and melting the materials at the sheets interface. However, RSW uses an electrode to apply pressure at the sheets’ interface while LSW uses laser beam without any application of pressure at the interface. LSW was found to be 5 times faster in generating spots compared to RSW and can be easily automated. Comparison between micro-RSW’s and micro -LSW’s abilities to join thin foil of Inconel and thick steel showed that the achieved strength of a good weld using micro-LSW is higher than strength of a good weld obtained using micro-RSW[
126]. Absence of subgrain region at the weld interface caused the HAZ in laser welding to be much smaller than HAZ in RSW. Furthermore, as the number of high angle grain boundaries (HAGB) were higher (90.89%) in LSW compared to RSW and with HAGB providing greater obstacle to dislocation gliding, laser welded joints had greater weld strengths compared to resistance spot welded joints under good weld conditions. As much as the LSW is favourable for welding in the hard-to-reach sections of an automotive or aircraft body parts, the welding is limited to the optical properties of the materials. For example, in glass fibre reinforced thermoplastic (GFRTP), depending on the glass fibre length and orientation, the fibres can scatter the laser beam and reduce the amount of radiation available for the melting of the matrix[
157].
Table 6 shows comparison between the review spot welding processes.
This review has shown that within the period of 10 years (2013-2023), only a small number of publications have reported work on joining composite materials or to form composite joints using the spot-welding processes compared to the number of publications in the joining of similar and dissimilar metals within the same period.
Figure 22 shows a comparison of number of publications reviewed in the review paper. More work seems to be concentrated on the FFSW and USW as solid-state welding has shown proven ability to join composite materials with vast difference in materials properties successfully compared to fusion welding. The use of interlayers including energy directors (ED) in RSW, FFSW and USW seems to be almost 50% of the total work reported.
5. Recommendation of Future Work
The review intends to identify new areas of studies in the use of spot welding to form composite joints. Even though joining composite materials and non-ferrous alloys such as aluminium and magnesium have been a challenging with RSW, the review found electrode modifications and use of interlayers have successfully spot-welded composite joints using RSW. The review also revealed that unlike the use of interlayer in RSW for dissimilar metals, limited work were reported in the use of interlayer for composite joints using RSW. One sided RSW is a newly developed process, developed for joining metal-polymer materials in the automotive industries. Coaxial one-sided resistance spot welding has been used for Al-CFRP and lower carbon steel-thermoplastic PA6 joints[
34,
36,
37,
158,
159,
160] and there are still prospects to study other combinations such as stainless steel-thermoplastic and magnesium-CFRP. Ren et.al[
159] has stated that further studies are required on co-axial electrode materials combination as only the SUS404-CuCr combination for column and cylinder, have been used in all the reported work on coaxial one sided resistance spot welding. Due to limited reported work on the use of auxiliary joining elements such as insert in REW and interlayers for RSW of metal-composites, these are also areas that have scope for future investigations. Dharaiya et.al[
161] has also raised concerns that the use of interlayers in RSW increases the weight of the BiW and affects production cost and proposed studies to identify critical locations on BiW to use interlayers rather than the entire BiW.
FSSW and USW are the solid-state spot-welding processes that have potentials in spot welding of composite joints and are extensively researched. Some of the potential research areas in FFSW and USW are:-
- a)
The review on FSSW has found that work on the use of interlayers in metal-polymer or metal-composites spot weld joints are quite limited compared to the work on the use of metal interlayers in dissimilar metals joints. CFRP is the interlayer that has been used to most experimental studies. Limited work has been seen in the use of thermoplastics such as nylon and polyethylene. Furthermore, most interlayer related studies have only used aluminium, and no work has been done on joining magnesium with composite or high-strength-steel with composite.
- b)
FFSW has been found to be a more suitable process to spot weld composite joints compared to RSW but as seen in
Figure 21, FFSW is a more costly process than RSW. Even though other variants of FFSW have been introduced in the recent years, especially Refill-FFSW, limited work was found in the process improvement of this spot-welding process. An area in FFSW that will require further investigation especially in joining composite materials is the efficient tool design and optimum tool profile.
- c)
Majority of the work reviewed in FFSW and USW on metal-polymer and metal-composite are purely experimental. There are still a lot of opportunity in finite element analyse (FEA) studies in 2D and 3D models especially in analysing the temperature gradient and stress distribution in the composite weld area during solid state spot welding especially with the use of interlayers and energy directors.
- d)
Energy directors play a huge role in concentrating the heat in the weld area during USW. Even though there have been work reported on the use of different type of ED in composite spot weld joints, limited work or in fact no work have been found in the use of EDs for metal-thermoset joints.
- e)
Another area of study which has research potential is the fatigue failure analysis of spot welds created by FSSW and USW. All the experimental work reviewed in the review for both FSSW and USW used static loading to analyse spot weld strength.
The reviewed work on LSW has found that only two work have been reported on the laser spot welding of metal-polymer and metal composites till date. Most of the laser welding work reported on composite joints as reviewed in
Table 5 are involving seam welding. Limited work have been reported on the use on interlayers in LSW hence a potential research area in the future.
6. Conclusions
This paper reviewed the hybrid or composite spot weld joints made using the RSW, FFSW, USW and LSW to address the multi material design in automotive and aircraft structures. The formation of spot weld joints between metal-polymer or metal-polymer based composites using different spot-welding process variants included different combinations of welding parameters, variations in the machine setup and welding processes, use of metallic and non-metallic elements at the joining interface and different bonding mechanisms. The use of elements such as metal inserts, nanoparticles, interlayers and energy directors have shown that apart from able to join dissimilar materials together without causing any polymeric degradation and material damage, these elements have improved the spot weld strengths either by impeding grain growth, mechanical interlocking mechanism and chemical bonding. Mechanical interlocking is mainly due to the plastic deformation of the metal sheet which enters the polymer/composite region creating an anchoring effect (macro mechanical interlocking). Mechanical interlocking has also been formed due to the molten polymers penetrating into the micro cavities on the metal sheets (micro mechanical interlocking). Mechanical interlocking is the common hybrid bonding mechanism in RSW, FFSW, USW and LSW. FFSW and USW are the variants that have shown superior ability to produce composite joints. The former however is an expensive process due to the complexity in tool design and latter is only suitable for small components and will potentially increase manufacturing cost due to the need of different clamping. The review identified the use of elements such as interlayers and energy directors in hybrid/composite spot weld joints are however limited compared to the use of these elements in the dissimilar metal spot weld joints. Finally, future studies related to the spot welding of composite joints using the spot-welding variants were recommended.