What is Hot Crack?
Hot cracks refer to cracks that appear at high temperatures (usually during solidification or hot deformation) in materials, accompanied by intense thermal stress. In steel welding or casting, these cracks propagate along grain boundaries and inclusion regions, severely affecting material properties, strength, and service life.
Main Causes of Hot Cracks
- Thermal Stress & Gradient: During welding or hot working, rapid cooling of localized high-temperature areas creates a large temperature difference, causing uneven thermal expansion/contraction within the steel. If this thermal stress exceeds the material's strength, cracks will form in the high-temperature areas.
- Material Chemical Composition and Alloying Elements: Some alloying elements (such as sulfur, phosphorus, nickel, and silicon) may cause steel to form low-melting-point mixtures or eutectic structures at high temperatures, weakening the intergranular spaces and making them more prone to cracking during cooling.
- Solidification Mode & Grain Size: The solidification process of different steel grades determines the grain structure. If the cooling rate is too fast or the material solidifies unevenly, intergranular stress concentration zones will be generated, leading to cracks.
Why are hot cracks so common in welding?
The weld zone undergoes rapid heating and cooling, resulting in a significant temperature difference between the weld metal and the heat-affected zone (HAZ), subjecting the material to high-temperature tension and shrinkage shear forces. Welding hot cracks mainly form during the solidification stage of the weld metal and are commonly seen in:
- Segregation of steel chemical composition
- Excessive welding heat input
- Poor temperature control during welding
- Uneven welding speed
- High external constraints
How to prevent hot cracks?
- Control heat input: Reducing welding heat input helps decrease the temperature gradient and alleviate thermal stress.
- Improve material composition & preheating treatment: Alloying, removing impurities (such as sulfur and phosphorus), or preheating the workpiece can slow down the solidification rate and prevent the formation of brittle structures.
- Select appropriate weld filler materials: Using welding wire/electrode with better high-temperature plasticity can improve resistance to hot cracking.
Conclusion
Hot cracking in steel is a structural defect that forms at high temperatures. Essentially, it is an intergranular cracking phenomenon caused by the combined effects of multiple factors, including thermal stress, solidification characteristics, and alloy segregation, occurring at the end of solidification or within the range of decreasing high-temperature plasticity. From a metallurgical perspective, it often occurs in the "brittle temperature range" where the material's strength has not yet fully developed, but it has already been subjected to tensile stress, thus exhibiting distinct stage-specific and microstructure-sensitive characteristics.
During welding, rapid heating and cooling lead to significant temperature gradients; during casting, insufficient solidification shrinkage and feeding of the liquid metal can create tensile stress concentrations; during hot working, internal compositional segregation or coarse grains can also reduce high-temperature ductility. These factors combine to significantly reduce the crack resistance of steel at high temperatures. Once hot cracks form, they not only weaken the load-bearing capacity of components but can also become the initiation source of fatigue cracks and stress corrosion cracking, seriously affecting structural safety and service life.
Therefore, understanding the formation mechanism of hot cracks is not only crucial for solving surface quality problems but also for ensuring structural reliability. By optimizing material composition design, controlling impurity content, rationally setting welding heat input, improving cooling conditions, and implementing preheating and post-heat treatment, crack susceptibility can be effectively reduced. Simultaneously, establishing a comprehensive process evaluation and quality monitoring system in actual production is also essential for improving stability.
Overall, hot crack control is a typical "material-process-structure" collaborative management problem. Only by forming a systematic control strategy at the three levels of material selection, process parameters, and operating procedures can defects be reduced at the source, improving product quality, production stability, and long-term service reliability.
To learn more about our solutions and services, please contact ASIATOOLS for more information.