The plane strain shear fracture of the advanced high strength steels

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Sun
Author(s):  
Hua-Chu Shih ◽  
Ming F. Shi

Fracturing in a tight radius during stretch bending has become one of the major manufacturing issues in stamping advanced high strength steels (AHSS), particularly for those AHSS with a tensile strength of 780 MPa or higher. Computer simulations often fail to predict this type of fracture, since the predicted strains are usually below the conventional forming limit curve. In this study, a laboratory stretch-forming simulator (SFS) is used to simulate the stretch bending of AHSS in stamping to develop a possible failure criterion for use in computer simulations. The SFS simulates the stamping process when sheet metal is drawn over a die radius with tension applied. Various sizes of die radius are used during the experiment, and the shear fracture phenomenon can be recreated using this test for a given material and gauge. It is found that shear fracture depends not only on the radius-to-thickness ratio but also on the tension/stretch level applied to the sheet. The experimental data show that a critical radius-to-thickness ratio for shear fracture exists for any given material and gauge, but this ratio is not unique and it depends upon the amount of tension imposed during the bending.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew S. Walp ◽  
Astrid Wurm ◽  
John F. Siekirk ◽  
Ajit K. Desai

Author(s):  
Ji Hyun Sung ◽  
Ji Hoon Kim ◽  
R. H. Wagoner

Unpredicted sheet forming failures of dual-phase (DP) steels can occur in regions of high curvature and with little apparent necking. Such failures are often referred to as “shear fractures”. In order to reproduce such fractures in a laboratory setting, and to understand their origin and the inability to predict them, a novel draw-bend formability (DBF) test was devised using dual displacement rate control. DP steels from several suppliers, with tensile strengths ranging from 590 to 980 MPa, were tested over a range of rates and bend ratios (R/t) along with a TRIP (transformation induced plasticity) steel for comparison. The new test reliably reproduced three kinds of failures identified as types 1, 2, and 3, corresponding to tensile failure, transitional failure, and shear fracture, respectively. The type of failure depends on R/t and strain rate, and presumably on the initial specimen width, which was constant in this study. Two critical factors influencing the lack of accurate failure prediction were identified. The dominant one is deformation-induced heating, which is particularly significant for advanced high strength steels because of their high energy product. Temperature rises of up to 100 deg. C were observed. This factor reduces formability at higher strain rates, and promotes a transition from types 1 to 3. The second factor is related to microstructural features. It was significant in only one material in one test direction (of 11 tested) and only for this case was the local fracture strain different from that in a tensile failure. Alternate measures for assessing draw-bend formability were introduced and compared. They can be used to rank the formability of competing materials and to detect processing problems that lead to unsuitable microstructures.


2021 ◽  
Vol 883 ◽  
pp. 294-302
Author(s):  
Bernd Arno Behrens ◽  
Kai Brunotte ◽  
Hendrik Wester ◽  
Matthäus Dykiert

Advanced High Strength Steels (AHSS) are widely used in today's automotive structures for lightweight design purposes. FE simulation is commonly used for the design of forming processes in automotive industry. Therefore, besides the description of the plastic flow behaviour, also the definition of forming limits in order to efficiently exploit the forming potential of a material is required. AHSS are prone for crack appearances without prior indication by thinning, like exemplary shear fracture on tight radii and edge-fracture, which can not be predicted by conventional Forming Limit Curve (FLC). Stress based damage models are able to do this. However, the parameterisation of such models has not yet been standardised. In this study a butterfly specimen geometry, which was developed at the Institute for Forming Technology and Machines (IFUM), was used for a stress state dependent fracture characterisation. The fracture behaviour of two AHSS, CP800 and DP1000, at varied stress states between pure shear and uniaxial loading was characterised by an experimental-numerical approach. For variation of the stress state, the specimen orientation relative to the force direction of the uniaxial testing machine was orientated at different angles. In this way, the relevant displacement until fracture initiation was determined experimentally. Subsequently, the experimental tests have been numerically reproduced giving information about the strain and stress evolution in the crack impact area of the specimen for the experimentally identified fracture initiation. With the help of this testing procedure, two different stress-based damage models, Modified Mohr-Coulomb (MMC) and CrachFEM, were parameterised and compared.


Author(s):  
Hua-Chu Shih ◽  
Ming F. Shi ◽  
Z. Cedric Xia ◽  
Danielle Zeng

Developing a proper local formability failure criterion is the key to the successful prediction of the local formability of Advanced High Strength Steels (AHSS) in computer simulations. Shear fracture, which refers to the fracture occurred in the die radius when a sheet metal is drawn over a small die radius, often occurs earlier than predicted by the conventional forming limit curve (FLC). As shown in a previous study using a laboratory Stretch-Forming Simulator (SFS), shear fracture depends not only on the radius-to-thickness (R/T) ratio but also on the tension/stretch level applied to the sheet during stretching or drawing. In the SFS test, a flat sheet is first clamped at the both ends then gradually is wrapped around the die radius as the punch moves downward. This process simulates the early stage of stamping when a sheet metal is initially stretched or drawn over a die/punch radius. However, shear fracture may not occur in this stage if the stretch/tension level is not high enough. In this study, the Bending under Tension (BUT) tester is used to evaluate shear fracture occurring in the later stage of stamping, after the sheet metal is totally wrapped around the die radius. It is demonstrated that shear fracture does occur in this deformation mode when a sufficient tension level is applied. Effects of forming conditions, such as forming speeds and lubrication on shear fracture, are also investigated. When compared to the results from the SFS, the data points failing at the die radius tangent point agree very well. It is observed that all data points above the tangent point failure line show shear fracture, while data points below this line show tensile failure (localized necking) regardless of the test methods used. This indicates that the tangent point fracture line can be used as the shear fracture failure limit. This failure criterion can be used in a computer simulation to simulate the shear fracture phenomenon in the entire deformation process involved in a sheet metal stretching or drawing over a die radius.


2010 ◽  
Vol 3 (S1) ◽  
pp. 187-190 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ji Hoon Kim ◽  
Ji Hyun Sung ◽  
D. K. Matlock ◽  
Daeyong Kim ◽  
R. H. Wagoner

Metals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 902
Author(s):  
Jon Edward Gutierrez ◽  
Jacqueline Noder ◽  
Clifford Butcher

The objective of the current study is to develop a practical, deterministic approach to the prediction of the in-plane formability of two third generation advanced high-strength steels (AHSS) of 980 and 1180 MPa ultimate tensile strength using only quasi-static mechanical property data. The hardening response to large strains was experimentally measured with the use of simple shear and tensile tests and validated in tensile simulations. The process-corrected limit strains in the Nakazima and Marciniak tests were compared to various analytical Forming Limit Curve (FLC) models for in-plane stretching. It was observed that the widely-used Marciniak–Kuczynski model can adequately predict the experimental FLC in biaxial stretching but significantly underestimated the limit strains in uniaxial stretching for both third generation AHSS. The observed through-thickness shear fracture mode in biaxial stretching was reasonably well-captured by the Bressan–Williams (BW) instability model for the 1180 MPa steel. A proposed extension of the BW model to uniaxial tension by adoption of the maximum in-plane shear stress criterion (BWx model) provided superior experimental correlation relative to the zero-extension model of Hill that was too conservative. Finally, a linearized version of the modified maximum force criterion (MMFC) was proposed that markedly improved the correlation with the process-corrected FLC for in-plane stretching of AHSS. The developed framework for FLC prediction was then applied to a DP980 AHSS and an AA5182 aluminum alloy from the literature. The DP980 corroborated the observed trend for the two third generation AHSS whereas the MK and the BWx models performed best for the AA5182 with its saturation-type hardening behavior and non-quadratic yield surface.


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