Plasma arc welding is another common process that uses a non-consumable tungsten electrode and a plasma torch to join metals. This arc-welding process requires four key components:
Plasma arc torch – This uniquely designed welding gun houses the tungsten electrode.
Shielding gas supply – Inert gases, such as argon and helium, envelope the weld zone preventing reactions with atmospheric gases.
Plasma gas supply – Inert gas is heated to extremely high temperatures inside the welding torch transforming it into plasma.
Power supply – Plasma arc welding relies on high-power direct current.
During the plasma arc welding process, direct current is supplied creating an arc between the tungsten electrode and the metal workpiece. This arc ionizes gas particles turning them into plasma. The hot plasma is responsible for heating, melting, and fusing sheet metal pieces. A welder will manually feed in filler metals where necessary.
Plasma arc welding is ideal for thin metals and applications that require deep, narrow welds. It can be used for welding stainless steel, aluminum, alloy steel, copper, carbon steel, and lead.