Method And Apparatus For Welding With Mechanical Arc Control

- Illinois Tool Works, Inc.

A method and apparatus for feeding wire from a source of wire to a weld includes one or more motors disposed adjacent the wire to drive the wire to the weld. A buffer is disposed between the source and an arc end of the torch. Another motor may be disposed near the wire source. A wire tension controller may be provided. The one or more motors advance and retract the wire, and wire is stored, or the path length altered, when the wire is retracted.

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Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates generally to the art of welding. More specifically, it relates to welding using a short circuit process.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

There are many different arc welding processes used for numerous welding applications. While different processes share some characteristics, such as using an electric arc and/or current flow to provide the heat for the weld, different processes have characteristics that render them desirable for particular applications.

MIG welding is a widely used process that gives high heat input into the wire electrode and the workpiece, and thus can give high deposition rates. However, the process can be unstable and control of the arc length can be difficult. The MIG process is often performed as a short circuit welding.

Another known welding process is called controlled short circuit welding, or short circuit welding. Short circuit welding is often performed as a MIG process. Generally, short circuit welding includes a short circuit state, wherein the welding wire is touching the weld pool thus creating a short circuit, and an arc state, wherein an arc is formed between the welding wire and the weld pool. During the arc state the wire melts, and during the short circuit state the molten metal is transferred from the end of the wire to the weld puddle.

Disadvantages of short circuit welding relate to the transitions between states, and instability of the process. Transition from the short circuit state to the arc state was typically caused by providing sufficient current to “pinch” off a droplet. The pinching off at high current can result in a violent disintegration of the molten metal bridge producing excessive weld spatter. Instability also results from the weld pool being pushed away.

Many attempts in the prior art were made to create a stable short circuit welding power supply, such as those shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,717,807, 4,835,360, 4,866,247, 4,897,523, 4,954,691, 4,972,064, 5,001,326, 5,003,154, 5,148,001, 5,742,029, 5,961,863, 6,051,810 and 6,160,241. These patents generally disclose complicated control schemes that fail to control the process to provide a stable and effective weld. They include control schemes that try to control the deposition of material and/or predict or cause a transition to the subsequent state based on the total energy put into the weld, the length of the stick out, total watts, time of the preceding state, etc.

These schemes share a common failure: they attempt to control both the energy of the weld and the transition between states using output current or power. This necessarily entails a sacrificing of one control goal (either energy to the weld or state transition) for the sake of the other. The net result is that the control schemes do not perform well at either controlling the energy into the weld or controlling the transition.

Another short circuit welding control system is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,326,591. This system adequately controls the energy into the weld, but it does not provide independent control of the transitions between states.

The present inventors have published descriptions of a controlled short circuit welding process where mechanical movement of the wire (advancing and retracting) is used to control the transition between welding states. The short circuit state is entered by advancing the wire until the wire touches the weld pool. The arc state is entered by retracting the wire until the wire does not touch the weld pool, and an arc forms. This system allows a typical output control to be used to control the energy delivered to the weld. By separating control of the transitions from control of energy, the system allows for better control of each.

A controlled short circuit welding system requires the capability of advancing and retracting the wire. The inventors have disclosed in the literature the use of a stepper motor to control the wire movement. A stepper motor adequately provides for short term advancing and retracting of the wire.

However, a stepper motor does not necessarily provide adequate feeding of the wire over the long term. Accordingly, a system that provides for advancing and retracting of the wire, and long term feeding of the wire, is desirable.

One problem with controlled short circuit welding arises when the wire is retracted. The wire from the source is feeding toward the weld, and has momentum in that direction. The retracting motor moves the wire in the opposite direction. With nothing to compensate for the opposing forces, the wire might not feed in a smooth and efficient manner. Accordingly, a controlled short circuit welder that compensates for the reversal of the wire is desirable.

Another problem with controlled short circuit welding is that the prior art has not fully taken advantage of the process control made possible by the mechanical control of the state transitions. Thus, a controlled short circuit welder that provides for electrical control of the arc for the purpose of controlling heat into the weld, and not for causing transitions from one state to another, is desirable.

The prior art has not adequately addressed the needs of short circuit welding at lower currents with thicker wires. The difficult to implement control schemes, in particular, make it difficult to weld with thicker wire, such as 2.4 mm diameter wire, e.g., at low currents, such as less than 100 amps. Accordingly, a controlled short circuit welding process that may be used at low currents relative to the wire diameter is desirable.

SUMMARY OF THE PRESENT INVENTION

According to a first aspect of the invention a system for feeding wire from a source of wire to a weld includes one or more motors disposed adjacent the wire to drive the wire to the weld. A buffer is disposed between the source and an arc end of the torch.

According to a second aspect of the invention a system for feeding wire from a source of wire to a weld includes at least one motor disposed adjacent the wire and disposed to drive the wire to a torch. A wire tension controller is provided.

According to a third aspect of the invention a method of feeding wire from a source of wire to a torch includes driving the wire toward and away from the torch and, when the wire is driven away from the torch, storing a length of wire between the source and an arc end of the torch.

According to a fourth aspect of the invention a method of feeding wire to a welding system includes driving the wire toward and away from an arc end of a torch and controlling the tension in the wire.

According to a fifth aspect of the invention a method of feeding wire from a wire source to a torch in a welding system includes driving the wire toward and away from an arc end of the torch and, when the wire is driven away from the torch, changing the length of the wire path from the source to an arc end of the torch.

According to a sixth aspect of the invention a system for feeding wire from a source of wire to a weld includes at least one motor disposed adjacent the wire and disposed to drive the wire to a torch and a sensor disposed to sense the tension in the wire.

The buffer includes a wire liner, and the wire is in the liner at least part way from the source to the torch. The liner may be compressible, such as a coil spring in various embodiments.

The liner is in a tube, such that the path of the liner within the tube can be increased or decreased, relative to the tube length, for example the tube has an inner diameter substantially greater than the outer diameter of the liner in other embodiments.

The buffer includes a shaft with a hollow path therethrough, and the wire extends though the hollow path. The tube is mounted to the shaft, so that the tube moves with the shaft relative to the wire, or it does not move, in various embodiments.

Sensors are provided, that sense the amount of wire in the buffer, or the tension on the wire, for controlling the speed of the wire fed, or the length of the wire stored, or the tension therein, in response thereto in various alternatives.

The one or more motor is one of a stepper motor, a servo motors, a zero backlash motor, or a gearless motor in other alternatives.

A wire feed motor is disposed closer to the source than to the torch, and the stepper motor, a servo motors, a zero backlash motor, a gearless motor, or a linear actuator closer to the torch than the source in some embodiments.

The at least one motor may be a pair of motors disposed on opposite sides of the wire.

Other principal features and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon review of the following drawings, the detailed description and the appended claims.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a diagram of a welding system, in accordance with the present invention;

FIG. 2 is a torch with a buffer and reversible motors in accordance with the present invention;

FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the torch of FIG. 2;

FIG. 4 is a detailed cross-sectional view of a buffer in accordance with the present invention;

FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view of a weld cable used as part of a buffer in accordance with the present invention; and

FIG. 6 is a wave form of a process cycle in accordance with the preferred embodiment.

Before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in detail it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of the components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments or of being practiced or carried out in various ways. Also, it is to be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. Like reference numerals are used to indicate like components.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

While the present invention will be illustrated with reference to a particular welding system using particular components, it should be understood at the outset that the invention may also be implemented with other systems, components, and modules, and be used in other environments.

Generally, the present invention is a method and apparatus for controlled short circuit welding that includes mechanical control of transitions between the arc and short circuit states. In one embodiment the process includes a pulse mode. Control of energy to the weld is effected using the output current or voltage magnitude, wave shape, time, etc. Thus, the transitions are caused to occur, and current can be coordinated with, the transitions to reduce spatter, instability, or other undesirable features, by, for example, changing the current as the transition occurs, or in anticipation of the transition.

Mechanical control of the states is performed by advancing and retracting the wire at the arc. An advance followed by a retraction defines one process cycle. (Process cycle, as used herein, includes one cycle of the states of the process such as an arc state followed by a short circuit state, or an arc state, followed by a short circuit state, followed by a pulse state, etc.) The advancing and retracting are, in the preferred embodiment, accomplished using a pair of motors disposed on either side of the wire, opposite one another and near (or mounted on) the torch. The motors are, in various embodiments stepper motors, servo motors, planetary drive motors, zero backlash motors, gearless motors, or replaced with a linear actuator. The pair is disposed one after the other in one embodiment.

Stepper motors are used in the preferred embodiment, and the number, and angle or size of the step is controlled to control the length of wire advanced or retracted.

The preferred embodiment includes a wire feed motor mounted near the source of wire, such as a reel of wire, that drives the wire to the torch (although other embodiments omit this motor). As the reversible motors retract the wire (and the wire feed motor continues to feed the wire) a buffer is provided to account for the increase in wire between the wire feed motor and the reversible motors. Similarly, when the reversible motors advance the wire, wire is withdrawn from the buffer. The reversible motors move the end of the wire in addition to the movement from the wire feed motor, or they superimpose motion onto motion imposed by the wire feed motor. The speed of the wire feed motor is slaved to the average speed of the reversible motors, so that, on average, they both drive the same length of wire, in the preferred embodiment.

The buffer may be anything that stores and returns the extra wire, or provides an increased wire path length between the source and the torch. The buffer of the preferred embodiment includes a wire liner about the wire for at least a portion of the distance from the source to the torch. The liner is disposed in a tube that is wider, and the liner can bend and flex within the tube, thus increasing the length of wire/in a given length of tube. The tube is mounted to a hollow shaft, and the wire passes through the shaft. The shaft is fixed in one position. Thus, as the wire is retracted, the wire moves relative to the tube and shaft (or the tube and shaft may be said to move relative to the wire). The shaft could be mounted to slide along the axis of the wire, and thus move relative to the tip of the torch, thereby increasing the length of the wire path between the tip (arc end) of the torch and the wire source end of the torch.

Alternatively, the liner may be mounted to the shaft, and the wire moves relative to the liner. The liner is compressible, such as a coil spring, so that as the wire retracts, the spring compresses, in the preferred embodiment. Sensors may be provided that sense the amount of wire in the buffer, or the tension of the wire, and the process controlled (average wire feed speed e.g.) may be controlled in response thereto.

A controller is provided that causes the motors to reverse at least once per process cycle in the preferred embodiment, and controls the current output based on mean arc current (average current during the arc state only, or a function thereof), power, energy, voltage, or other welding output parameters. Feedback may include one or more of short detection, buffer feedback, tension feedback, pool oscillation, in addition to traditional welding parameters. Alternatives include reversing less frequently than once per cycle. One alternative provides for repeated reversals during the weld (i.e., not merely at the conclusion of the weld), but not once per cycle.

For example, the braking at the end of the arc cycle can feed forces between wire and droplet, which may disrupt the liquid bridge without retracting action. This is particularly present with lower wire diameters and higher short circuiting frequencies. The droplet has the speed of the wire before braking. This kinetic energy can be enough for disrupting the liquid path. In this case, no retracting is needed.

The control may include controlling heat, penetration and/or bead formation by controlling the advancement of the wire into the weld pool. The relative time in arc state and short state (arc balance) may be set by the user (as may be the time in the pulse state if it is used). Control of parameters such as polarity (balance), gas mixtures etc. may be done in coordination with the relative arc/short times (or other parameters).

Referring now to FIG. 1, a welding system 100 includes, in accordance with the preferred embodiment, a power supply 102, a wire feeder 104, a controller 106 and a torch 108, and a supply line 112 which feeds welding current, gas, water, control, and current for motors to torch 108, that cooperate to provide welding current on weld cables 105 and 107 to a workpiece 110. Power supply 102, wire feeder 104 and controller 106 may be commercially available welding system components, such as a Miller Invision 456® power supply, and a modified Miller XR® wire feeder. Power supply, as used herein, includes any device capable of supplying welding, plasma cutting, and/or induction heating power including resonant power supplies, quasi-resonant power supplies, etc., as well as control circuitry and other ancillary circuitry associated therewith. Power source, or source of power, as used herein, includes the power circuitry such as rectifiers, switches, transformers, SCRs, etc. that process and provide the output power. Wire feeder, as used herein, includes the motor or mechanism that drives the wire, the mounting for the wire, and controls related thereto, and associated hardware and software. It can include a motor near the source of wire that pushes the wire to the weld, and/or motor(s) near the torch that pulls the wire into the line and to the contact tip, or pulls the wire back from the contact tip. Wire path as used herein, includes the path the wire takes from the wire source to the torch or power supply, and may include through a liner, a buffer, etc.

Controller 106 is part of wire feeder 104 and power supply 102 in this embodiment. Controller 106 also includes control modules adapted for the present invention, such as a reversible wire feeder control module to control the reversible motors, a mean arc current module, and the control module for the mechanical control of the arc states. Controller, as used herein, includes digital and analog circuitry, discrete or integrated circuitry, microprocessors, DSPs, etc., and software, hardware and firmware, located on one or more boards, used to control a device such as a power supply and/or wire feeder. Control module, as used herein, may be digital or analog, and includes hardware or software, that performs a specified control function. For example, a mean arc current control module controls the output to provide a desired mean arc current.

FIG. 2 shows torch 108 in more detail. Torch 108 includes, in addition to the features of prior art torches, a pair of motor housings 203 and 205 have motors disposed within to drive the wire to or from the weld, and a buffer 201 to take up wire 209 when it is retracted, and provide wire 209 when it is advanced. Buffer, as used herein, includes components used to take up the wire when the wire direction is reversed and provide wire when the wire is advanced. The end of the wire at the arc is shown as 207. The motor housings and buffer are adjacent to the torch in the preferred embodiment, and near the torch in other embodiments. Adjacent the torch, as used herein, includes abutting, touching or part of the torch, directly or through a housing. Near the torch, as used herein, includes much closer to the torch than the source of wire, such as more than 75% of the way from the source to the torch. One embodiment provides that a handheld torch includes a small spool of wire mounted on the torch.

FIG. 3 is a cross-sectional view of the torch of FIG. 2, taken along lines A-A. A pair of motors 301 and 302 are preferably stepper motors (although they may be other motors) and drive the wire and are disposed adjacent to the wire, and directly opposite one another, on opposite sides of the wire, thereby substantially equalizing forces on the wire. In alternative embodiments they are disposed one following the other, or on the same side of the wire. Directly opposite one another, as used herein, includes at substantially the same position along a wire path. Disposed adjacent the wire, as used herein, includes being close enough to the wire to push or pull the wire. Drive the wire, as used herein, includes one or both of moving the wire toward the torch and moving the wire away from the torch.

Buffer 201 may also be seen on FIG. 3, and is shown in more detail on FIG. 4, and includes a shaft 401 mounted on a support 403. Shaft 401 has a hollow axis, through which wire 209 passes. Weld cable 105 (FIGS. 1 and 5) is comprised of an outer tube 501 and a liner 503, with wire 209 disposed therein. The outer diameter of line 503 is substantially smaller than the inner diameter of tube 501, to allow for wire length to be taken up or stored by liner 503 flexing within tube 501. Liner 503 is preferably a coil spring that allows for compression and expansion to further buffer the wire. Storing a length of wire, as used herein, includes taking up wire when the wire direction is reversed. Substantially more than an outer diameter of the liner, as used herein includes enough room to move and flex. Wire liner, as used herein, includes a tube in which the wire can easily move. Tube 501 is mounted to shaft 401 so that wire 209 moves with respect to shaft 401.

A sensor can be included that senses the amount of wire taken up by buffer 201. Examples of such sensors include a wheel with an encoder that is turned as the wire moves past it, or a linear transformer, with the liner being comprised of a ferrite or magnetic material. The controller includes a buffer feedback input that receives the feedback, and provides a wire feed motor output that is responsive to the buffer feedback. Tension in the wire can also be sensed and used to control the process.

Control of the process from an electrical standpoint is easier since process control is performed using mechanical control of the wire position. Therefore, the welding current becomes an independent process parameter, totally opposite to the conventional MIG process.

One desirable control scheme uses mean arc current (average current during the arc state, or a function thereof) as the control variable. This allows better control of the melting and heat to the weld, and reduces spatter and instability, compared to prior art control schemes. It is possible to use mean arc current to control the heat, since arc current is not used to cause the transition from arc to short (or the opposite). The control of the states can be coordinated with the current control. For example, if a state transition is to occur at a time T1, the current transition can occur shortly before that, so as to avoid disrupting the weld pool. Another control feature is to allow the user to set relative arc and short time, or balance between EP and EN.

One desirable arc waveform is shown in FIG. 6, and includes an arc current waveform with three segments—an initial high current segment, an intermediate current segment, and a low current segment. The low current segment is entered into prior to the short forming, thereby enhancing a smooth transition to the short circuit state.

Because the welding current becomes an independent process parameter, the current can be set to the value, which directs the process into the wanted situation by physical determined behavior. For a low spatter material transfer, the forces onto the liquid have to be low, when the cross section of the electrical conductor is low. Therefore, the currents have to be low during those phases. During the middle part of the short circuit state, where larger cross section of the electrical conductor is present, high forces can be used to move liquids. Also, high currents during the middle part of the short circuit state are possible. During the arc phase, the current can be used for movement of the liquid and determining the melting rate.

The present invention may be used with known control schemes, but implement them in a more desirable fashion by eliminating the need for current levels to cause transitions. For example, schemes using either arc length or stick-out as a control variable can be implemented easily because the stepper motors allow stick-out to be measured precisely. Because the transitions are caused mechanically, the arc length may be redetermined each process cycle.

The present invention may be implemented with a variety of processes, including but not limited to electrode positive, electrode negative, alternating polarity, ac mig, mig brazing, hard facing, and welding with thick wire at low currents. For example, welding on a 2.4 mm wire may be performed at 100 amps, or even 35 or fewer amps with the present invention. Prior art systems required more current on thick wire to cause the short to clear and to enter the arc state. The present invention doesn't rely on current to clear the short, so thick wire and low current may be used.

The control preferably ties the speed of the wire feed motor to the average speed of the stepper motors, so that the wire feed speed follows the process speed. Averaging speed over 20-30 process cycles (about 500 msec.) provides for effective control.

Pool oscillation frequency can be found by monitoring the distance the wire travels until a short is created, or an arc is created. One control scheme provides that the state transitions are timed to coincide with the natural frequency of pool oscillation. The controller includes a frequency module and a pool oscillation feedback circuit that effect this control scheme. A short detection feedback circuit may be used as part of the control loop.

Numerous modifications may be made to the present invention which still fall within the intended scope hereof. Thus, it should be apparent that there has been provided in accordance with the present invention a method and apparatus for controlled short circuit welding that fully satisfies the objectives and advantages set forth above. Although the invention has been described in conjunction with specific embodiments thereof, it is evident that many alternatives, modifications and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, it is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications and variations that fall within the spirit and broad scope of the claims.

Claims

1. A system for feeding wire from a source of wire to a weld, comprising:

at least one motor disposed adjacent the wire and disposed to drive the wire to a torch; and
a buffer disposed between the source and an arc end of the torch.

2. The wire feeder of claim 1, wherein the buffer includes a wire liner and the wire is disposed within the liner at least a portion of the distance from the source to the torch.

3. The wire feeder of claim 2, wherein the liner is disposed within a tube, such that the path of the liner within the tube can be increased or decreased, relative to the tube length.

4. The wire feeder of claim 3, wherein the tube has an inner diameter that is substantially more than an outer diameter of the liner.

5. The wire feeder of claim 3, wherein the buffer includes a shaft with a hollow path therethrough, wherein the wire follows the hollow path, and the tube is mounted to the shaft, such that the tube moves with the shaft relative to the wire.

6. The wire feeder of claim 2, wherein the buffer includes a shaft with a hollow path therethrough, wherein the wire follows the hollow path, and the liner is mounted to the shaft, such that the liner moves with the shaft relative to the wire.

7. The wire feeder of claim 2, wherein the liner is compressible.

8. The wire feeder of claim 7, wherein the liner is a coil spring.

9. The wire feeder of claim 1, further comprising a sensor disposed to sense the length of wire in the buffer.

10. The wire feeder of claim 1, wherein the at least one motor disposed adjacent the wire is one of a stepper motor, a servo motors, a zero backlash motor, or a gearless motor.

11. The wire feeder of claim 1, wherein the at least one motor disposed adjacent the wire includes a wire feed motor closer to the source than to the torch, and a stepper motor, a servo motors, a zero backlash motor, a gearless motor, or a linear actuator closer to the torch than the source.

12. The wire feeder of claim 1, wherein the at least one motor includes a pair of motors disposed on opposite sides of the wire.

13. A system for feeding wire from a source of wire to a weld, comprising:

at least one motor disposed adjacent the wire and disposed to drive the wire to a torch; and
a wire tension controller, disposed adjacent the wire and between the source and an arc end of the torch.

14. The wire feeder of claim 13, further comprising a wire tension sensor, disposed to provide a tension feedback signal to the tension controller.

15. The wire feeder of claim 13, wherein the at least one motor disposed adjacent the wire is one of a stepper motor, a servo motors, a zero backlash motor, or a gearless motor.

16. The wire feeder of claim 13, wherein the at least one motor disposed adjacent the wire includes a wire feed motor closer to the source than to the torch, and a stepper motor, a servo motors, a zero backlash motor, a gearless motor, or a linear actuator closer to the torch than the source.

17. The wire feeder of claim 13, wherein the at least one motor includes a pair of motors disposed on opposite sides of the wire.

18. A method of feeding wire from a source of wire to a torch, comprising:

driving the wire toward and away from the torch; and
when the wire is driven away from the torch, storing a length of wire between the source and an arc end of the torch.

19. The method of claim 18, wherein storing includes moving the wire relative to a liner disposed about the wire.

20. The method of claim 19, wherein storing further includes moving the liner within a tube, such that the path of the liner within the tube is increased or decreased, relative to the tube length.

21-81. (canceled)

Patent History
Publication number: 20070000893
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 18, 2006
Publication Date: Jan 4, 2007
Applicant: Illinois Tool Works, Inc. (Glenview, IL)
Inventors: Gerd Huismann (Hamburg), Peter Hennecke (Zulpich Am Silberg), Richard Hutchison (New London, WI)
Application Number: 11/465,566
Classifications
Current U.S. Class: 219/137.700
International Classification: B23K 9/12 (20060101);