Welded, Laminated Apparatus, Methods of Making, and Methods of Using the Apparatus
20190076948 ยท 2019-03-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B23K9/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T137/0318
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B01J19/0093
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T29/49718
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y10T428/12903
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B01J2219/00835
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J2219/00783
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y10T137/85938
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
B23K1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
The invention describes methods of welding onto laminated devices using a low temperature welding process. Also described are laminated devices with welds that do not disrupt a brazed core block of sheets in the laminated devices. Novel laminated devices with welded features for servicing the devices are also described.
Claims
1. Laminated apparatus comprising: a core block comprising sheets of metal bonded together, at least in part, by a braze composition disposed between the sheets; a welding composition disposed on the core block and adhering to the braze composition; wherein the welding composition has a composition that differs from the composition of the braze composition; and wherein the welding composition is diffused 2 mm or less into the core block.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the welding composition forms a continuous weld across more than one metal sheet and more than one of the braze composition disposed between the sheets.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 comprising fluid channels disposed in the sheets and inlets to the fluid channels disposed on edges of the sheets.
4. The apparatus of claim 3 having resistance to leakage such that, when the fluid channels are pressurized with N2 at 100 psig (6.9 bar gauge), the pressure decreases by less than 0.5 psi (0.034 bar) after 15 minutes.
5. The apparatus of claim 3 comprising: a first set of fluid channels wherein each channel comprises an inlet and an outlet; a second set of fluid channels wherein each channel comprises an inlet and an outlet; a first welded inlet manifold, a first welded outlet manifold; a second welded inlet manifold, and a second welded outlet manifold; wherein the first welded inlet manifold is in fluid communication with the inlets of the first set of fluid channels; wherein the first welded outlet manifold is in fluid communication with the outlets of the first set of fluid channels; wherein the second welded inlet manifold is in fluid communication with the inlets of the second set of fluid channels; wherein the second welded outlet manifold is in fluid communication with the outlets of the second set of fluid channels; and wherein each of the manifolds are connected to the core block by a welding composition wherein the welding composition has a composition that differs from the composition of the braze composition; and wherein the welding composition is diffused 2 mm or less into the core block.
6. The apparatus of claim 5 wherein at least 2 of the manifolds are welded to the core block on a same side of the core block.
7. The apparatus of claim 1 comprising subassemblies that have been diffusion bonded.
8. A method of conducting a unit operation in the apparatus of claim 1 comprising: passing a fluid into a channel in the core block and conducting a unit operation on the fluid in the core block.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein a first fluid is passed into a first set of inlets and into a first set of channels in the core block; a second fluid is passed into a second set of inlets and into a second set of channels in the core block; and wherein the first fluid and the second fluid flow in adjacent sheets within the core block and the first fluid exchanges heat with the second fluid in the core block.
10. A method of welding a metal onto laminated apparatus, comprising: providing laminated apparatus comprising sheets of metal bonded together, at least in part, by a braze composition disposed between the sheets; applying a metal onto the laminated apparatus by a welding technique wherein a wire moves in a reciprocating motion and wherein a spark is generated when the wire touches and/or is pulling away from the laminated apparatus; and wherein molten metal is applied to the surface while the wire moves away from the surface.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein, within 30 seconds of active welding, and without liquid cooling, the temperature of the laminated article is 100 C. or less (preferably 50 C. or less) throughout the entire apparatus.
12. The method of claim 10 wherein a weld is formed at a rate of 25 cm per minute or greater.
13. A method of repairing a crack comprising applying a metal according to the process of claim 10 onto a crack in laminated apparatus.
14-19. (canceled)
20. The apparatus of claim 1 further comprising a solid-walled enclosure that encloses plural apertures within a single, contiguous space on a side of the core block; wherein the solid-walled enclosure comprises a solid, continuous wall that is welded on one side to the core block by the welding composition.
21. A process of operating the apparatus of claim 16, comprising: opening the manifold while leaving the enclosure welded to the core block; and performing service on the core block.
22. The process of claim 21 wherein the step of performing service comprises at least one of: regenerating catalyst, replacing catalyst, regenerating sorbent, replacing sorbent, cleaning, or diagnostic testing.
23. The method of claim 8 wherein the unit operation comprises a Fischer-Tropsch reaction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0019] The appearance of the weld seam on a part after welding along a laminate seam can have a distinct semicylinder or partial cylinder shape (see
[0020] In some embodiments, the weld has the semicircular shape described above. The metal sheets have a composition that is different than the braze interlayer. In some embodiments, the weld composition is different from the composition of the metal sheets.
[0021] The invention includes microchannel apparatus schematically illustrated in
[0022] In addition to the use of CMT to join an enclosure to a brazed article, other low energy input methods of welding may be used to attach an enclosure or a header to a laminated device. For example, a fiber laser, such as with a Yb laser, may be used to join a solid metal article to a brazed article. The laser welding approach creates a narrow but deep penetration weld that is particularly useful for creating a structural joint on a pressure or load bearing part.
[0023] The invention also includes methods of making laminated apparatus comprising the use of CMT; preferably including CMT to weld the enclosure on the core block.
[0024] The apertures comprise inlets or outlets for fluid processing or ports used for instrumentation for process measurements and controls, diagnostics, or for use during manufacturing or refurbishment of the apparatus
[0025] The invention also includes methods of accessing the plural microchannels through said plural apertures, comprising: breaking the connection between the enclosure and a conduit without disrupting the weld that attaches the solid-walled enclosure to the core block, and accessing the plural microchannels through the solid-walled enclosure and through the plural apertures.
[0026] The invention also includes reattaching the connection to re-attached piping.
[0027] After breaking the connection, tasks that could be conducted include: maintenance or inspection of the core block, including removing material (comprising for example, but not limited to catalyst, sorbents, fins, waveforms, and other inserted materials), adding material (catalyst, sorbents, fins, waveforms, inserts), and inspecting the quality and uniformity of the flow passages through diagnostic tests, including flow tests, and performing maintenance, such as cleaning or repair of the passageways.
[0028] The enclosure is a solid metal ring that mates with the brazed surface and is then used for subsequent welding of headers or footers to bring or remove fluids to a microchannel brazed device. The solid ring may be a unitary (preferably made by molding) part or made from two or four or more parts that are welded together to form a solid ring. In one embodiment for a square or rectangular face, it is preferable to form a ring using 4 straight parts with weld joints to form a contiguous square or rectangular ring. The advantage of a ring (which may be circular, square, rectangular, or other shape) is that the header or footer may be cut or ground off many times to have access to the channels after operation for catalyst refurbishment or for evaluation of changes to channels or for a cleaning or defouling step after process operation. It is envisioned that catalysts loaded in a microchannel device would be removed periodically (from every week to once every 10 years) and at that time, the header and or footer would need to be separated from the ring for such refurbishment. The initial welding across braze seams or joints or across laminates might only occur once in the life of a brazed device.
[0029] The inventive methods of servicing a laminated device provide significant advantages over methods that can be conducted using conventional apparatus (such as simple tub welds) since the apertures can be accessed without damaging the surface of the core block. Additionally, since the weld between the enclosure and the conduit can be removed by simple grinding (optionally vacuum grinding) rather than cutting; there is less contamination than conventional methods.
[0030] In some preferred embodiments of the invention, there is a weld across plural brazing layers (the layers between metal sheets). The weld can be parallel to the metal sheets, perpendicular to the metal sheets or at any desired angle with respect to metal sheets in a core block.
[0031] The invention also provides a method of using the any of the above-described apparatus comprising passing a fluid through channels in the core block, and a conducting a unit operation on the fluid as it passes through the channels. The apparatus may be used for processes such as heat exchange, mixing, heating, cooling (including a heat sink for electronic devices), chemical reaction, chemical separation. The apparatus may also comprise an electrochemical device, which utilizes a solid or liquid electrolyte and electrodes to obtain electrical work from a spontaneous chemical reaction (including but not limited to batteries and fuel cells), or conversely, to apply electrical work to generate chemical species (including but not limited to eletrolyzers, oxygen generators and reverse fuel cells), or to produce an electrical signal in response to a change in the device environment (including but not limited to sensors and analytical devices). The apparatus may also be a thermoelectric device. In some preferred embodiments, the apparatus is a chemical reactor.
[0032] In preferred embodiments, sheet thicknesses are 1 cm or less (such as may contain waveforms, engineered catalyst structures, fins, etc.), 2 mm or less, and in some embodiments 1 mm or less.
[0033] As used herein, the term microchannel refers to any conduit having at least one dimension (height, length, or width) (wall-to-wall, not counting catalyst) of 1 cm or less, including 2 mm or less (in some embodiments about 1.0 mm or less) and greater than 100 nm (preferably greater than 1 m), and in some embodiments 50 to 500 m. Microchannels are also defined by the presence of at least one inlet that is distinct from at least one outlet. Microchannels are not merely channels through zeolites or mesoporous materials. The length of a microchannel corresponds to the direction of flow through the microchannel. Microchannel height and width are substantially perpendicular to the direction of flow of through the channel. In the case of a laminated device where a microchannel has two major surfaces (for example, surfaces formed by stacked and bonded sheets), the height is the distance from major surface to major surface and width is perpendicular to height.
[0034] In some embodiments, the laminated apparatus may comprise one or more waveforms. A waveform is a 3-dimensional contiguous piece of thermally conductive material that at least partially defines one or more microchannels. The waveform may have a gap between the waves that is in the microchannel dimension or may be larger. In exemplary form, this gap may be in the microchannel dimension because then heat is easily transferred to the long direction in the wave that separates the heat transfer channels before conducting down the more conductive wave form to the heat transfer channels. The waveform may be made of copper, aluminum, FeCrAlY, metals, oxides, or other materials. The waveform preferably has a thermal conductivity greater than 1 W/m-K.
[0035] As is standard patent terminology, comprising means including and neither of these terms exclude the presence of additional or plural components. For example, where a device comprises a lamina, a sheet, etc., it should be understood that the inventive device may include multiple laminae, sheets, etc. In alternative embodiments, the term comprising can be replaced by the more restrictive phrases consisting essentially of or consisting of.
[0036] Unit operation means chemical reaction, vaporization, compression, chemical separation, distillation, condensation, mixing, heating, or cooling. A unit operation does not mean merely fluid transport, although transport frequently occurs along with unit operations. In some preferred embodiments, a unit operation is not merely mixing.
[0037] A process of operating means repairing, maintaining, refurbishing, or diagnosing; and may include preparations conducted prior to conducting unit operations, scheduled or unscheduled maintenance, or other uses of the apparatus.
[0038] Microchannel apparatus (such as microchannel reactors) preferably include microchannels (such as a plurality of microchannel reaction channels) and a plurality of adjacent heat exchange microchannels. The plurality of microchannels may contain, for example, 2, 10, 100, 1000 or more channels capable of operating in parallel. In preferred embodiments, the microchannels are arranged in parallel arrays of planar microchannels, for example, at least 3 arrays of planar microchannels. In some preferred embodiments, multiple microchannel inlets are connected to a common header and/or multiple microchannel outlets are connected to a common footer. In some preferred embodiments, there may be multiple separate flow streams. One fluid stream may flow through a plurality of microchannels. A second fluid stream may flow through a second plurality of microchannels, or may flow through one or more macrochannels. During operation, heat exchange microchannels (if present) contain flowing heating and/or cooling fluids. Non-limiting examples of this type of known reactor usable in the present invention include those of the microcomponent sheet architecture variety (for example, a laminate with microchannels) exemplified in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,200,536 and 6,219,973 (both of which are incorporated by reference).
[0039] In many preferred embodiments, the microchannel apparatus contains multiple microchannels, preferably groups of at least 5, more preferably at least 10, parallel channels that are connected in a common manifold that is integral to the device (not a subsequently-attached tube) where the common manifold includes a feature or features that tend to equalize flow through the channels connected to the manifold. Examples of such manifolds are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/695,400, filed Oct. 27, 2003 which is incorporated herein. In this context, parallel does not necessarily mean straight, rather that the channels conform to each other. In some preferred embodiments, a microchannel device includes at least three groups of parallel microchannels wherein the channel within each group is connected to a common manifold (for example, 4 groups of microchannels and 4 manifolds) and preferably where each common manifold includes a feature or features that tend to equalize flow through the channels connected to the manifold.
[0040] Microchannels can incorporate materials paced inside the microchannels, such as catalysts, sorbents, or other materials. Such materials may be incorporated into the channels as particulates or small pieces Catalysts, sorbents, or other coatings can be applied onto the interior surface of a microchannel using techniques that are known in the art such as wash coating. Techniques such as CVD or electroless plating may also be utilized. In some embodiments, impregnation with aqueous salts is preferred. Pt, Rh, and/or Pd are preferred in some embodiments. Typically this is followed by heat treatment and activation steps as are known in the art. Other coatings may include sol or slurry based solutions that contain a catalyst precursor and/or support. Coatings could also include reactive methods of application to the wall such as electroless plating or other surface fluid reactions.
[0041] The sheets of metal in a laminated apparatus are preferably a stainless steel or a superalloy, such as a nickel, cobalt, or iron based superalloy. Other examples include, but are not limited to, FeCrAlY, titanium alloys, and NiCrW superalloy. Sheets typically range in thickness from 10 m to 1 cm, more typically 100 m to 5 mm. Sheets may be solid (such as dividing walls) and may contains holes or slots as well as partially etched channels and other features such as is known in the art of laminated devices.
[0042] Prior to brazing surfaces are preferably cleaned and may be coated with a surface layer such as a Ni layer.
[0043] Materials for brazing are well known in the art. Brazing is typically conducted in vacuum or an inert atmosphere. As is well known, during brazing, a relatively low temperature brazing material is melted between metal sheets and then some diffusion occurs between the brazing material and the sheets and, after cooling, a braze composition (which typically differs somewhat from the composition of the original brazing material) remains between the sheets. Techniques such as microscopy and other known metallurgical techniques can be used to identify and characterize a braze composition between sheets in a laminated device.
[0044] The present invention is generally applicable to brazed laminates. For nickel-based metal sheets, a preferred brazing material is NiP. One standard braze material is BNi-6 or a combination of 10-12.5% Phosphorous in nickel. Brazing often uses a transient liquid phase (TLP) interlayer which acts as a melting point depressant for a metal. At an elevated temperature that exceeds the operational temperature requirement but does not approach the melting point of the parent material or a temperature which contributes significant diffusion bonding or grain growth of metals across laminate shim boundaries, the TLP transforms from a solid to a liquid phase to flow and fill all voids between layers. As the braze process occurs the TLP depressant material, which may be phosphorous or boron or others diffuses from the braze interlayer to change the melting point of the metal.
[0045] Some nonlimiting examples of brazing compositions include the following each of these braze interlayers would be advantaged by the described invention.
TABLE-US-00001 MBF AWS & AMS Nominal Composition, wt. % Alloy Classifications Cr Fe Si C* B P W Co Ni 15 13.0 4.2 4.5 0.03 2.8 1.0* Bal 20 AWS BNi2/AMS 4777 7.0 3.0 4.5 0.06 3.2 Bal 30 AWS BNi3/AMS 4778 4.5 0.06 3.2 Ba 50 AWS BNi-5a 19.0 7.3 0.08 1.5 Bal 51 AWS BNi-5b 15.0 7.25 0.06 1.4 Bal 55 5.3 7.3 0.08 1.4 Bal 60 AWS BNi6 0.10 11.0 Bal 80 15.2 0.06 4.0 Bal Foils are available with more rigid dimensional tolerances as specialty or A grades *Maximum concentration
TABLE-US-00002 Braze Temp. Density MBF AWS & AMS Melting Temp. C. ( F.) (Approx.) g/cm.sup.3 Alloy Classifications Solidus Liquidus C. ( F.) (lbm/in.sup.3) 15 965 (1769) 1103 (2017) 1135 (2075) 7.82 (0.283) 20 AWS BNi2/AMS 4777 969 (1776) 1024 (1875) 1055 (1931) 7.88 (0.285) 30 AWS BNi3/AMS 4778 984 (1803) 1054 (1929) 1085 (1985) 8.07 (0.291) 50 AWS BNi-5a 1052 (1924) 1144 (2091) 1170 (2138) 7.70 (0.278) 51 AWS BNi-5b 1030 (1886) 1126 (2058) 1195 (2183) 7.73 (0.278) 55 950 (1742) 1040 (1904) 1070 (1958) 7.72 (0.279) 60 AWS BNi6 883 (1621) 921 (1688) 950 (1742) 8.14 (0.294) 80 1048 (1918) 1091 (1996) 1120 (2045) 7.94 (0.278)
[0046] In preferred embodiments, a wire in the inventive welding process preferably has a similar, or the same, composition as the metal in the metal sheets of the laminate. In preferred embodiments, the wire has any of the compositions as described above for the metal sheets.
[0047] The phase diagram of NiP shows a eutectic point near 11% phosphorus by weight in nickel. As the phosphorous diffuses away from the interlayer into the adjacent metal surface, the local weight percent of nickel is reduced and the composition changes which solidifies the braze interlayer. One advantage of the braze process is that the resulting brazed device can withstand a higher braze temperature because the resultant phosphorous depleted interlayer region will only remelt at a higher temperature per the phase diagram. Unfortunately, the conventional welding temperature reaches the melt temperature of the parent material (1400 to 1500 C. for Stainless 300 series), often a nickel containing substance and the result is a remelt of the braze interlayer and the formation of cracks. The cracks both create leak problems for an operational device (heat exchanger, reactor, separations unit, mixer, or other single or combined unit operation) and mechanical integrity problems if the device is intended for high pressure and or temperature operation. Difficulties with welding over short sections of brazed devices and then inspecting, detecting, and repairing cracks has been encountered. This problem becomes even more challenging when attempting to weld along long sections of a brazed device with hundreds, or even thousands of thin sheets.
[0048] One conventional solution to avoid this problem is to braze, rather than weld, connections to brazed devices.
[0049] The invention provides a new use and a new advantage for a welding technique known as cold metal transfer (CMT). This technique is described at http://www.welding-robots.com/applications.php!app=cold+metal+transfer as follows:
Cold is a relative term in perspective to welding, Cold Metal Transfer welding is commonly referred to as CMT. The workpieces to be joined as well as the weld zones remain considerably colder in the cold metal transfer process (CMT) than they would with conventional gas metal arc welding.
The cold metal transfer process is based on short circuiting transfer, or more accurately, on a deliberate, systematic discontinuing of the arc, Results are a sort of alternating hot-cold-hot-cold sequence. The hot-cold method significantly reduces the arc pressure. During a normal short circuiting transfer arc, the electrode is distorted while being dipped into the weld pool, and melts rapidly at high transfer arc current. A wide process window and the resulting high stability define the cold metal transfer process, Automation and robot-assisted applications is what the process is designed for.
[0050] The major advancement is that the motions of the wire have been integrated into the welding process and into the overall management of the procedure. Every time short circuiting occurs, the digital process control interrupts the power supply and controls the retraction of the wire. The forward and back motion takes place at a rate of up to 70 times per second. The wire retraction motion aides droplet detachment during the short circuit. The fact that electrical energy is converted into heat is both a defining feature and sometimes critical side effect of arc welding. Ensuring minimal current metal transfer will greatly reduce the amount of heat generated in the cold metal transfer process. The restricted discontinuations of the short circuit leads to a low short-circuit current. The arc only inputs heat into the materials to be joined for a very short time during the arcing period because of the interruption in the power supply.
[0051] The reduced thermal input offers advantages such as low distortion and higher precision. Benefits include higher-quality welded joints, freedom from spatter, ability to weld light-gauge sheet as thin as 0.3 mm, as well as the ability to join both steel to aluminum and galvanized sheets.
[0052] Additional description of the CMT welding process is presented by Feng et al. in The CMT short-circuiting metal transfer process and its use in thin aluminum sheets welding, Materials and Design 30 (2009) 1850-1852.
[0053] A process known as controlled short circuit (CSC) operates similarly to CMT, and, for purposes of the present invention, comes within the term CMT. Frequency of the wire motion is preferably in the range of 10 to 30 Hz, but other frequencies are also useful. In some embodiments, travel speed of the wire along the surface is preferably less than about 30 inch per minute; in some embodiments travel speed is in the range of 1 to 25 inches per minute or 15 to 25 inches per minute.
[0054] The inventive process can be used to seal protruding features in laminated devices. An example is shown in
[0055] Shim Side Repairs [0056] One option to seal leaks along the shim side of a device, is to seal along the protruding edges of the shims. As shown in
Identify start and stop point of repair based on previously collected leak test results
Program robot for start and stop points with wire placed about 1.5 wire diameters away from the seam to be repaired [0057] Surface preparation: [0058] Wire brush seam prior to repair [0059] Wipe seam with acetone [0060] Set weld parameters: [0061] Feed angle=10 [0062] Wire feed speed=150 inches per minute [0063] Arc Length Value=+3.0 [0064] Travel Speed=20 inches per minute [0065] Run repair and visually inspect to ensure seam was covered
If seam was not fully covered in the known leak zone: grind down repair and perform second pass
Repeat until all coolant side zone leaks have been welded (see
Post repair machining [0066] Mill/Grind down repair beads on faces in zones where rings will be attached to 20 mil (500 microns) pad height
Post repair leak check [0067] Repeat leak test procedure to ensure that all leaks have been sufficiently sealed. If additional leaks exist, re-repair as necessary
The invention includes apparatus in which sheets comprising channels protrude from a face of a core block. Advantageously, this design can be combined with welds along the protruded sheets that have superior leak resistance. In some preferred embodiments, the protruded sheets are enclosed within an enclosure of the type described herein.
Example 1
[0068] The brazed device was leak checked to confirm the presence of leaks. The device consisted of SS 304L laminates that are brazed with a nickel phosphorous (BNi6) interlayer (0.001 thick, 25 microns), brazed at 960 C for 1 hour with a pressure of 60 lbf per in2 (4 bar). If leaks were found then they were repaired using Cold Metal Transfer (CMT) welding. SS304L, 40 mil (100 microns) diameter filler wire was used for the repair.
[0069] For devices with fins or waveforms or channels that need to be kept clean of weld material, a shroud is placed over such areas prior to welding. It is preferred but not required that shrouds are placed over openings or sides of a device not undergoing welding while repairing an affected or leaky face of a device.
Crack repair was accomplished on a device schematically illustrated in
The waveforms can be covered with a metal film to protect them during welding.
Example 2
[0084] Alternate inventive methods for sealing leaks across brazed joints along shim or laminae. The seam or opening of the channel is welded over directly (preferably by CMT). The fully closed channels are then reopened using machining, plunge electro-discharge machining, Molecular Decomposition Process Grinding MDP, grinding or other process to reopen just the flow passage ways while leaving the brazed joint fully covered with the CMT weld.
[0085] The invention thus includes a method in which a weld is formed over apertures (channel openings) and weld material is then removed to reopen the channelsthis method has been demonstrated to reduce leaking in a laminated device.