THE APPLICATION OF METAHEURISTICS APPROACH IN OPTIMISING SOME WELDING PARAMETERS IN TIG WELDING OF MILD STEEL.
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Abstract
The application of metaheuristic approach in optimising some welding parameters in TIG welding of mild steel is presented in this work. The study aims to optimise arc efficiency (AE) and thermal efficiency (TE) of the TIG welding process by applying metaheuristic optimisation techniques (MTOs), specifically the Genetic Algorithm (GA) and Particle Swarm Optimisation (PSO). The investigation focuses on identifying the optimal combination of welding parameters current, voltage, and gas flow rate that maximise process efficiency while maintaining physical validity and conformity with established TIG welding standards. The research methodology involved implementing mathematical models of arc and thermal efficiency based on the Goldak double-ellipsoidal heat source model. These models were coded and executed using MATLAB R2024b, where GA and PSO algorithms were used independently to optimise the input parameters within defined physical ranges obtained from validated literature. Simulation runs recorded iteration-wise outputs for each parameter, allowing convergence analysis and comparative assessment between both algorithms in terms of solution quality and computational performance. The results revealed that for arc efficiency, GA achieved optimum values at 75.59A, 14.80V, and
11.27L/min, yielding an AE of 0.81, while PSO attained optimal conditions at 63.16 A, 15.57 V, and 6.97 L/min with an AE of 0.97. For thermal efficiency, GA recorded optimum values at 67.26A, 17.21V, and 13.69L/min giving TE of 0.89, whereas PSO produced 92.09A, 18.82V, and 8.47L/min resulting in TE of 0.99. The optimised efficiency values were validated with literature and found to be in close agreement with the established efficiency range for TIG welding (0.36– 0.90), confirming the reliability of the metaheuristic approach.
11.27L/min, yielding an AE of 0.81, while PSO attained optimal conditions at 63.16 A, 15.57 V, and 6.97 L/min with an AE of 0.97. For thermal efficiency, GA recorded optimum values at 67.26A, 17.21V, and 13.69L/min giving TE of 0.89, whereas PSO produced 92.09A, 18.82V, and 8.47L/min resulting in TE of 0.99. The optimised efficiency values were validated with literature and found to be in close agreement with the established efficiency range for TIG welding (0.36– 0.90), confirming the reliability of the metaheuristic approach.
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