Abstract
A new technique to quantify grain shape and grain boundary curvature in the fusion zone (FZ) and the heat-effected zone (HAZ) of refractory metals and alloys has been developed. The application of this technique to quantify the effect of welding speed on these microstructural characteristics in simulated molybdenum welds is highlighted in this study. A 50% increase in weld speed more than doubles the fraction of grain segments in the fusion zone with orientations between 00 to 300 to the normal to the welding direction, with a corresponding 50% decrease in the fraction of grain segments oriented along the welding direction. This increase in weld speed also results in a reduction in grain size from approximately 120 繕m to 84 繕m along the WD at the FZ centerline. Grain boundary curvature is negative near the weld centerline and the edge of the fusion zone, indicating that with increasing distance from the weld centerline, the grain segments progressively rotate towards a direction normal to the welding direction at both locations. Presence of regions with relatively straight grain segments indicated by curvatures close to zero were identified in between the weld centerline and the edge of the FZ at all weld speeds.