History Of
Welding
Middle Ages
Welding can trace its historic development back to
ancient times. The earliest examples come from the Bronze Age. Small gold
circular boxes were made by pressure welding lap joints together. It is
estimated that these boxes were made more than 2000 years ago. During the
Iron Age the Egyptians and people in the eastern Mediterranean area
learned to weld pieces of iron together. Many tools were found which were
made approximately 1000 B.C.
During the Middle Ages, the art of blacksmithing was
developed and many items of iron were produced which were welded by
hammering. It was not until the 19th century that welding, as we know it
today was invented.
1800
Edmund Davy of England is credited with the discovery of
acetylene in 1836. The production of an arc between two carbon electrodes
using a battery is credited to Sir Humphry Davy in 1800. In the
mid-nineteenth century, the electric generator was invented and arc
lighting became popular. During the late 1800s, gas welding and cutting
was developed. Arc welding with the carbon arc and metal arc was developed
and resistance welding became a practical joining process.
1880
Auguste De Meritens, working in the Cabot Laboratory in
France, used the heat of an arc for joining lead plates for storage
batteries in the year 1881. It was his pupil, a Russian, Nikolai N.
Benardos, working in the French laboratory, who was granted a patent for
welding. He, with a fellow Russian, Stanislaus Olszewski, secured a
British patent in 1885 and an American patent in 1887. The patents show an
early electrode holder. This was the beginning of carbon arc welding.
Bernardos' efforts were restricted to carbon arc welding, although he was
able to weld iron as well as lead. Carbon arc welding became popular
during the late 1890s and early 1900s.
1890
In 1890, C.L. Coffin of Detroit was awarded the first
U.S. patent for an arc welding process using a metal electrode. This was
the first record of the metal melted from the electrode carried across the
arc to deposit filler metal in the joint to make a weld. About the same
time, N.G. Slavianoff, a Russian, presented the same idea of transferring
metal across an arc, but to cast metal in a mold.
1900
Approximately 1900, Strohmenger introduced a coated
metal electrode in Great Britain. There was a thin coating of clay or
lime, but it provided a more stable arc. Oscar Kjellberg of Sweden
invented a covered or coated electrode during the period of 1907 to 1914.
Stick electrodes were produced by dipping short lengths of bare iron wire
in thick mixtures of carbonates and silicates, and allowing the coating to
dry.
Meanwhile, resistance welding processes were developed,
including spot welding, seam welding, projection welding and flash butt
welding. Elihu Thompson originated resistance welding. His patents were
dated 1885-1900. In 1903, a German named Goldschmidt invented thermite
welding that was first used to weld railroad rails.
Gas welding and cutting were perfected during this
period as well. The production of oxygen and later the liquefying of air,
along with the introduction of a blow pipe or torch in 1887, helped the
development of both welding and cutting. Before 1900, hydrogen and coal
gas were used with oxygen. However, in about 1900 a torch suitable for use
with low-pressure acetylene was developed.
World War I brought a tremendous demand for armament
production and welding was pressed into service. Many companies sprang up
in America and in Europe to manufacture welding machines and electrodes to
meet the requirements.
1919
Immediately after the war in 1919, twenty members of the
Wartime Welding Committee of the Emergency Fleet Corporation under the
leadership of Comfort Avery Adams, founded the American Welding Society as
a nonprofit organization dedicated to the advancement of welding and
allied processes.
Alternating current was invented in 1919 by C.J.
Holslag; however it did not become popular until the 1930s when the
heavy-coated electrode found widespread use.
1920
In 1920, automatic welding was introduced. It utilized
bare electrode wire operated on direct current and utilized arc voltage as
the basis of regulating the feed rate. Automatic welding was invented by
P.O. Nobel of the General Electric Company. It was used to build up worn
motor shafts and worn crane wheels. It was also used by the automobile
industry to produce rear axle housings.
During the 1920s, various types of welding electrodes
were developed. There was considerable controversy during the 1920s about
the advantage of the heavy-coated rods versus light-coated rods. The
heavy-coated electrodes, which were made by extruding, were developed by
Langstroth and Wunder of the A.O. Smith Company and were used by that
company in 1927. In 1929, Lincoln Electric Company produced extruded
electrode rods that were sold to the public. By 1930, covered electrodes
were widely used. Welding codes appeared which required higher-quality
weld metal, which increased the use of covered electrodes.
During the 1920s there was considerable research in
shielding the arc and weld area by externally applied gases. The
atmosphere of oxygen and nitrogen in contact with the molten weld metal
caused brittle and sometime porous welds. Research work was done utilizing
gas shielding techniques. Alexander and Langmuir did work in chambers
using hydrogen as a welding atmosphere. They utilized two electrodes
starting with carbon electrodes but later changing to tungsten electrodes.
The hydrogen was changed to atomic hydrogen in the arc. It was then blown
out of the arc forming an intensely hot flame of atomic hydrogen during
the molecular form and liberating heat. This arc produced half again as
much heat as an oxyacetylene flame. This became the atomic hydrogen
welding process. Atomic hydrogen never became popular but was used during
the 1930s and 1940s for special applications of welding and later on for
welding of tool steels.
H.M. Hobart and P.K. Devers were doing similar work but
using atmospheres of argon and helium. In their patents applied for in
1926, arc welding utilizing gas supplied around the arc was a forerunner
of the gas tungsten arc welding process. They also showed welding with a
concentric nozzle and with the electrode being fed as a wire through the
nozzle. This was the forerunner of the gas metal arc welding process.
These processes were developed much later.
1930
Stud welding was developed in 1930 at the New York Navy
Yard, specifically for attaching wood decking over a metal surface. Stud
welding became popular in the shipbuilding and construction
industries.
The automatic process that became popular was the
submerged arc welding process. This "under powder" or smothered arc
welding process was developed by the National Tube Company for a pipe mill
at McKeesport, Pennsylvania. It was designed to make the longitudinal
seams in the pipe. The process was patented by Robinoff in 1930 and was
later sold to Linde Air Products Company, where it was renamed Unionmelt®
welding. Submerged arc welding was used during the defense buildup in 1938
in shipyards and in ordnance factories. It is one of the most productive
welding processes and remains popular today.
1940
Gas tungsten arc welding (GTAW) had its beginnings from
an idea by C.L. Coffin to weld in a nonoxidizing gas atmosphere, which he
patented in 1890. The concept was further refined in the late 1920s by
H.M.Hobart, who used helium for shielding, and P.K. Devers, who used
argon. This process was ideal for welding magnesium and also for welding
stainless and aluminum. It was perfected in 1941, patented by Meredith,
and named Heliarc® welding. It was later licensed to Linde Air Products,
where the water-cooled torch was developed. The gas tungsten arc welding
process has become one of the most important.
The gas shielded metal arc welding (GMAW) process was
successfully developed at Battelle Memorial Institute in 1948 under the
sponsorship of the Air Reduction Company. This development utilized the
gas shielded arc similar to the gas tungsten arc, but replaced the
tungsten electrode with a continuously fed electrode wire. One of the
basic changes that made the process more usable was the small-diameter
electrode wires and the constant-voltage poser source. This principle had
been patented earlier by H.E. Kennedy. The initial introduction of GMAW
was for welding nonferrous metals. The high deposition rate led users to
try the process on steel. The cost of inert gas was relatively high and
the cost savings were not immediately available.
1950
In 1953, Lyubavskii and Novoshilov announced the use of
welding with consumable electrodes in an atmosphere of CO2 gas. The CO2
welding process immediately gained favor since it utilized equipment
developed for inert gas metal arc welding, but could now be used for
economically welding steels. The CO2 arc is a hot arc and the larger
electrode wires required fairly high currents. The process became widely
used with the introduction of smaller-diameter electrode wires and refined
power supplies. This development was the short-circuit arc variation which
was known as Micro-wire®, short-arc, and dip transfer welding, all of
which appeared late in 1958 and early in 1959. This variation allowed
all-position welding on thin materials and soon became the most popular of
the gas metal arc welding process variations.
1960
Another variation was the use of inert gas with small
amounts of oxygen that provided the spray-type arc transfer. It became
popular in the early 1960s. A recent variation is the use of pulsed
current. The current is switched from a high to a low value at a rate of
once or twice the line frequency.
Soon after the introduction of CO2 welding, a variation
utilizing a special electrode wire was developed. This wire, described as
an inside-outside electrode, was tubular in cross section with the fluxing
agents on the inside. The process was called Dualshield®, which indicated
that external shielding gas was utilized, as well as the gas produced by
the flux in the core of the wire, for arc shielding. This process,
invented by Bernard, was announced in 1954, but was patented in 1957, when
the National Cylinder Gas Company reintroduced it.
In 1959, an inside-outside electrode was produced which
did not require external gas shielding. The absence of shielding gas gave
the process popularity for noncritical work. This process was named
Innershield®.
The electroslag welding process was announced by the
Soviets at the Brussels World Fair in Belgium in 1958. It had been used in
the Soviet Union since 1951, but was based on work done in the United
States by R.K. Hopkins, who was granted patents in 1940. The Hopkins
process was never used to a very great degree for joining. The process was
perfected and equipment was developed at the Paton Institute Laboratory in
Kiev, Ukraine, and also at the Welding Research Laboratory in Bratislava,
Czechoslovakia. The first production use in the U.S. was at the
Electromotive Division of General Motors Corporation in Chicago, where it
was called the Electro-molding process. It was announced in December 1959
for the fabrication of welded diesel engine blocks. The process and its
variation, using a consumable guide tube, is used for welding thicker
materials.
The Arcos Corporation introduced another vertical
welding method, called Electrogas, in 1961. It utilized equipment
developed for electroslag welding, but employed a flux-cored electrode
wire and an externally supplied gas shield. It is an open arc process
since a slag bath is not involved. A newer development uses self-shielding
electrode wires and a variation uses solid wire but with gas shielding.
These methods allow the welding of thinner materials than can be welded
with the electroslag process.
Gage invented plasma arc welding in 1957. This process
uses a constricted arc or an arc through an orifice, which creates an arc
plasma that has a higher temperature than the tungsten arc. It is also
used for metal spraying and for cutting.
The electron beam welding process, which uses a focused
beam of electrons as a heat source in a vacuum chamber, was developed in
France. J.A. Stohr of the French Atomic Energy Commission made the first
public disclosure of the process on November 23, 1957. In the United
States, the automotive and aircraft engine industries are the major users
of electron beam welding.
Most Recent
Friction welding, which uses rotational speed and upset
pressure to provide friction heat, was developed in the Soviet Union. It
is a specialized process and has applications only where a sufficient
volume of similar parts is to be welded because of the initial expense for
equipment and tooling. This process is called inertia welding.
Laser welding is one of the newest processes. The laser
was originally developed at the Bell Telephone Laboratories as a
communications device. Because of the tremendous concentration of energy
in a small space, it proved to be a powerful heat source. It has been used
for cutting metals and nonmetals. Continuous pulse equipment is available.
The laser is finding welding applications in automotive metalworking
operations.
Information courtesy of Hobart Institute Of Welding
Technology.
This article was excerpted from Modern Welding Technology,
4th edition, 1998, by Howard B. Cary. Published by Prentice-Hall, the book
may be ordered from the Training Materials Dept., Hobart Institute of
Welding Technology, 400 Trade Square East, Troy, OH 45373.
http://www.welding.org