Metal Inert Gas Welding (MIG/MAG)

Metals Shielded Gas Welding (MSG)" is a gas shielded welding process. It is differentiated into two variants: Metal Inert Gas (MIG) and Metal Active Gas (MAG). MIG uses inert shielding gas (e.g., argon or helium), while MAG uses active shielding gas (e.g., gas mixtures with oxygen or carbon dioxide). The arc burns between a melting electrode and the workpiece. At the Institute for Materials Science, robotic MIG/MAG welding on additively manufactured structures is researched.

Metals Shielded Gas Welding (MSG)" is a gas shielded welding process. It is differentiated into two variants: Metal Inert Gas (MIG) and Metal Active Gas (MAG). MIG uses inert shielding gas (e.g., argon or helium), while MAG uses active shielding gas (e.g., gas mixtures with oxygen or carbon dioxide). The arc burns between a melting electrode and the workpiece. At the Institute for Materials Science, robotic MIG/MAG welding on additively manufactured structures is researched.

Dr.-Ing. Thomas Hassel
Management
Address
Lise-Meitner-Straße 1
30823 Garbsen
Building
Room
203
Dr.-Ing. Thomas Hassel
Management
Address
Lise-Meitner-Straße 1
30823 Garbsen
Building
Room
203