Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming

A forming limit diagram (FLD) is commonly used as a useful means for characterizing the formability of sheet metal forming processes. In this study, the Nakajima test was used to construct the forming limit curve at necking (FLCN) and fracture (FLCF). The results of the FLCF are compared with increm...

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Main Authors: Gatea, Shakir, Xu, Dongkai, Ou, Hengan, McCartney, Graham
Format: Article
Published: Springer 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47263/
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author Gatea, Shakir
Xu, Dongkai
Ou, Hengan
McCartney, Graham
author_facet Gatea, Shakir
Xu, Dongkai
Ou, Hengan
McCartney, Graham
author_sort Gatea, Shakir
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description A forming limit diagram (FLD) is commonly used as a useful means for characterizing the formability of sheet metal forming processes. In this study, the Nakajima test was used to construct the forming limit curve at necking (FLCN) and fracture (FLCF). The results of the FLCF are compared with incremental sheet forming (ISF) to evaluate the ability of the Nakajima test to describe the fracture in ISF. Tests were carried to construct the forming limit diagram at necking and fracture to cover the strain states from uniaxial tension to equi-biaxial tension with different stress triaxialities - from 0.33 for uniaxial tension to 0.67 for equi-biaxial tension. Due to the fact that the Gurson–Tvergaard- Needleman (GTN) model can be used to capture fracture occurrence at high stress triaxiality, and the shear modified GTN model (Nahshon-Hutchinson’s shear mechanism) was developed to predict the fracture at zero stress or even negative stress triaxiality, the original GTN model and shear modified GTN model may be not suitable to predict the fracture in all samples of the Nakajima test as some samples are deformed under moderate stress triaxiality. In this study, the fractures are compared using either the original GTN model, shear modified GTN model or Nielsen-Tvergaard model with regard to stress triaxiality. To validate the ability of these models, and to assess which model is more accurate in predicting the fracture with different stress triaxialities, finite element (FE) simulations of the Nakajima test were compared with an experimental results to evaluate the applicability of the Nakajima test to characterise the fracture from ISF. The experimental and FE results showed that the shear modified GTN model could predict the fracture accurately with samples under uniaxial tension condition due to low stress triaxiality and that the original model is suitable for an equi-biaxial strain state (high stress triaxiality), whereas the stress triaxiality modified GTN model should be considered for samples which have moderate stress triaxiality (from plain strain to biaxial strain). The numerical and experimental FLCF of pure titanium from the Nakajima test showed good agreement with the experimental and numerical results of ISF.
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spelling nottingham-472632020-05-04T19:15:06Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47263/ Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming Gatea, Shakir Xu, Dongkai Ou, Hengan McCartney, Graham A forming limit diagram (FLD) is commonly used as a useful means for characterizing the formability of sheet metal forming processes. In this study, the Nakajima test was used to construct the forming limit curve at necking (FLCN) and fracture (FLCF). The results of the FLCF are compared with incremental sheet forming (ISF) to evaluate the ability of the Nakajima test to describe the fracture in ISF. Tests were carried to construct the forming limit diagram at necking and fracture to cover the strain states from uniaxial tension to equi-biaxial tension with different stress triaxialities - from 0.33 for uniaxial tension to 0.67 for equi-biaxial tension. Due to the fact that the Gurson–Tvergaard- Needleman (GTN) model can be used to capture fracture occurrence at high stress triaxiality, and the shear modified GTN model (Nahshon-Hutchinson’s shear mechanism) was developed to predict the fracture at zero stress or even negative stress triaxiality, the original GTN model and shear modified GTN model may be not suitable to predict the fracture in all samples of the Nakajima test as some samples are deformed under moderate stress triaxiality. In this study, the fractures are compared using either the original GTN model, shear modified GTN model or Nielsen-Tvergaard model with regard to stress triaxiality. To validate the ability of these models, and to assess which model is more accurate in predicting the fracture with different stress triaxialities, finite element (FE) simulations of the Nakajima test were compared with an experimental results to evaluate the applicability of the Nakajima test to characterise the fracture from ISF. The experimental and FE results showed that the shear modified GTN model could predict the fracture accurately with samples under uniaxial tension condition due to low stress triaxiality and that the original model is suitable for an equi-biaxial strain state (high stress triaxiality), whereas the stress triaxiality modified GTN model should be considered for samples which have moderate stress triaxiality (from plain strain to biaxial strain). The numerical and experimental FLCF of pure titanium from the Nakajima test showed good agreement with the experimental and numerical results of ISF. Springer 2017-10-30 Article PeerReviewed Gatea, Shakir, Xu, Dongkai, Ou, Hengan and McCartney, Graham (2017) Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming. International Journal of Advanced Manufacturing Technology . pp. 1-17. ISSN 1433-3015 Nakajima test ISF FLD Stress triaxiality GTN model https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00170-017-1195-z doi:10.1007/s00170-017-1195-z doi:10.1007/s00170-017-1195-z
spellingShingle Nakajima test
ISF
FLD
Stress triaxiality
GTN model
Gatea, Shakir
Xu, Dongkai
Ou, Hengan
McCartney, Graham
Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming
title Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming
title_full Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming
title_fullStr Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming
title_short Evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming
title_sort evaluation of formability and fracture of pure titanium in incremental sheet forming
topic Nakajima test
ISF
FLD
Stress triaxiality
GTN model
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47263/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47263/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/47263/