CV Personal Website


FA
Seyed Mohammad Hossein Seyedkashi

Seyed Mohammad Hossein Seyedkashi

Professor

Full-Time Faculty Member

Faculty: Engineering

Department: Mechanical Engineering

Degree: Ph.D

CV Personal Website
FA
Seyed Mohammad Hossein Seyedkashi

Professor Seyed Mohammad Hossein Seyedkashi

Full-Time Faculty Member
Faculty: Engineering - Department: Mechanical Engineering Degree: Ph.D |

Seyed Mohammad Hossein Seyedkashi received the Bachelor of Science degree in Manufacturing Engineering from Tabriz University, Tabriz, Iran, in 2003, the Master of Science degree from Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran, in 2005, and the Ph.D. degree in Manufacturing Engineering from Tarbiat Modares University in 2012He is currently a Professor in the Mechanical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, at the University of Birjand, Birjand, Iran. His research interests include metal forming (hydroforming, laser forming, roll forming), additive manufacturing, friction welding, and optimization.

 

 

My affiliation

Mechanical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, University of Birjand, Birjand, Iran.

 

Show More

A systematic selection of shielding gas composition for GMA-DED of HSLA thin walls focused on geometrical features

AuthorsSeyed Mohammad Hossein Seyedkashi,MOHEB ALI GHAYOUR,Mahmoud Moradi,Yadollah Yaghoubinezhad,Americo Scotti
JournalMetals
Page number1-18
Serial number16
Volume number3
IF1.984
Paper TypeFull Paper
Published At2026
Journal TypeTypographic
Journal CountrySwitzerland
Journal IndexISI،JCR،Scopus
Keywordsshielding gas selection; gas metal arc direct energy deposition; high, strength low, alloy steel; metal transfer regularity; waviness; layer geometry

Abstract

While shielding gas selection significantly impacts gas metal arc directed energy deposi-tion (GMA-DED), current industrial practices often rely on ad hoc decisions. This study proposes a logical and reproducible selection methodology that prioritizes geometric outcomes (such as layer height, width, and surface waviness) for HSLA thin walls. The performance of three Argon-based blends was examined with the constraints of the same wire, contact tip-to-work distance, wire feed, and deposition speeds. However, to ensure a scientifically ‘fair comparison’ between gas blends, the methodology prioritized main-taining optimal metal transfer regularity for each composition by adjusting the proper voltage setting with a constant-voltage power source. Results showed that increasing CO2 content requires higher arc voltage but lower average current to maintain a constant wire feed speed. This shift leads to shorter and wider layers, while lateral surface waviness remains largely unaffected by gas composition. The primary contribution of this work is the establishment of a multifaceted decision-making system that enables users to balance these geometric and operational outcomes against specific production goals. As a demonstration, an Ar + 8% CO2 blend was successfully selected using a criterion that balances high productivity with low thermal stress, providing a justified alternative to conventional trial-and-error selection.

Paper URL