Crystal plasticity based identification of anisotropic strain rate potentials for sheet metal forming simulation

2009 ◽  
Vol 517 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 261-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meziane Rabahallah ◽  
Salima Bouvier ◽  
Tudor Balan ◽  
Brigitte Bacroix

2019 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 512-519 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mats Sigvant ◽  
Johan Pilthammar ◽  
Johan Hol ◽  
Jan Harmen Wiebenga ◽  
Toni Chezan ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meziane Rabahallah ◽  
Tudor Balan ◽  
Salima Bouvier ◽  
Brigitte Bacroix ◽  
Cristian Teodosiu

Author(s):  
Suhui Wang ◽  
Chunlei Xie ◽  
Le Ye ◽  
Xin Wu

Under thermally activated deformation conditions many engineering metals (steels, aluminum and magnesium alloys) exhibit much enhanced formability; thus, thermal forming has received increasing interests by automotive industries. The thermally activated material constitutive behaviors are not only strain dependent, but also strain rate and temperature dependent, and it is sensitive to in-situ microstructure evolution. In addition, non-steady-state deformation at a high strain rate (in the order of 10−2s−1 or above) introduces additional challenges in forming simulation. In this case, von Mises based macroscopic plasticity are often not sufficient to describe material behaviors with complex thermomechanical history. In this paper, the rate-dependent crystal plasticity model [1] was applied to the high temperature and high strain rate deformation that is dominated by dislocation creep. A user material subroutine was developed and used for FEA metal forming simulation using commercial ABAQUS/Dynamic code. In the simulation, material behavior was computed based on crystal plasticity at each strain increment without using von-Mises equation or a look-up table of material testing data. By inputting different slip systems or their combinations, and by matching the predicted crystallographic textures with experimentally obtained ones, the active slip systems responsible for the deformation was identified. Then, the material parameters were best fitted to the tensile curves obtained at various strain rates and temperatures. The model was applied for more complex multi-axial metal forming processes. The material behavior, along with its crystallographic texture development, was obtained and validated. As a demonstration, this paper also provides an analysis of a newly developed thrmal forming process [2] with this meso-scale crystal plasticity approach. This forming process involves diameter expansion of a tubular workpiece under combined internal pressure and axial loading and at elevated temperatures.


2007 ◽  
Vol 2007.15 (0) ◽  
pp. 231-232
Author(s):  
Takayuki HAMA ◽  
Cristian TEODOSIU ◽  
Akitake MAKINOUCHI ◽  
Hirohiko TAKUDA

2011 ◽  
Vol 347-353 ◽  
pp. 3939-3945
Author(s):  
Jin Yan Wang ◽  
Ji Xian Sun

In most FEM codes, the isotropic-elastic & transversely anisotropic-elastoplastic model using Hill's yield function has been widely adopted in 3D shell elements (modified to meet the plane stress condition) and 3D solid elements. However, when the 4-node quadrilateral plane strain or axisymmetric element is used for 2D sheet metal forming simulation, the above transversely anisotropic Hill model is not available in some FEM code like Ls-Dyna. A novel approach for explicit analysis of transversely anisotropic 2D sheet metal forming using 6-component Barlat yield function is elaborated in detail in this paper, the related formula between the material anisotropic coefficients in Barlat yield function and the Lankford parameters are derived directly. Numerical 2D results obtained from the novel approach fit well with the 3D solution .


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