Ultrasonic vibration–assisted incremental sheet metal forming

Author(s):  
Liangchi Zhang ◽  
Chuhan Wu ◽  
Hossein Sedaghat
Author(s):  
Mehdi Vahdati ◽  
Ramezanali Mahdavinejad ◽  
Saeid Amini

The mechanism of incremental sheet metal forming is based on plastic and localized deformation of sheet metal. The sheet metal is formed using a hemispherical-head tool in accordance with the path programmed into the computer numerical control milling machine controller. Experimental and numerical analyses have been performed previously on the application of ultrasonic vibration to various metal forming processes. However, thus far, the effects of ultrasonic vibration on incremental sheet metal forming have not been investigated. This article presents the process of design, analysis, manufacture and testing of a vibrating forming tool for the development of ultrasonic vibration–assisted incremental sheet metal forming. The results obtained from modal analysis and natural frequency measurement of the vibrating tool confirmed the emergence of a longitudinal vibration mode and resonance phenomenon in the forming tool. Then, the effect of ultrasonic vibration on incremental sheet metal forming was studied. The obtained experimental results from the straight groove test on Al 1050-O sheet metals showed that ultrasonic vibration led to decrease in the following parameters as compared with conventional incremental sheet metal forming: applied force on forming tool axis, spring-back and surface roughness of formed sample.


2012 ◽  
Vol 504-506 ◽  
pp. 863-868 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miklos Tisza ◽  
Péter Zoltán Kovács ◽  
Zsolt Lukács

Development of new technologies and processes for small batch and prototype production of sheet metal components has a very important role in the recent years. The reason is the quick and efficient response to the market demands. For this reasons new manufacturing concepts have to be developed in order to enable a fast and reliable production of complex components and parts without investing in special forming machines. The need for flexible forming processes has been accelerated during the last 15 years, and by these developments the technology reaches new extensions. Incremental sheet metal forming (ISMF) may be regarded as one of the promising developments for these purposes. A comprehensive research work is in progress at the University of Miskolc (Hungary) to study the effect of important process parameters with particular emphasis on the shape and dimensional accuracy of the products and particularly on the formability limitations of the process. In this paper, some results concerning the determination of forming limit diagrams for single point incremental sheet metal forming will be described.


Incremental Sheet metal forming is a die less method of forming which offers high formability. In this research work; effect of step depth, tool rotation speed and preheating temperature on surface roughness and thinning of flange wall is investigated in hole flanging using incremental forming. The parameter optimization is carried out by Taguchi method. Grey relational analysis is carried out to obtain best parameter combination.


2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 4911-4927
Author(s):  
Swagatika Mohanty ◽  
Srinivasa Prakash Regalla ◽  
Yendluri Venkata Daseswara Rao

Product quality and production time are critical constraints in sheet metal forming. These are normally measured in terms of surface roughness and forming time, respectively. Incremental sheet metal forming is considered as most suitable for small batch production specifically because it is a die-less manufacturing process and needs only a simple generic fixture. The surface roughness and forming time depend on several process parameters, among which the wall angle, step depth, feed rate, sheet thickness, and spindle speed have a greater impact on forming time and surface roughness. In the present work, the effect of step depth, feed rate and wall angle on the surface roughness and forming time have been investigated for constant 1.2 mm thick Al-1100 sheet and at a constant spindle speed of 1300 rpm. Since the variable effects of these parameters necessitate multi-objective optimization, the Taguchi L9 orthogonal array has been used to plan the experiments and the significance of parameters and their interactions have been determined using analysis of variance (ANOVA) technique. The optimum response has been brought out using response surfaces. Finally, the findings of response surface method have been validated by conducting additional experiments at the intermediate values of the parameters and these results were found to be in agreement with the predictions of Taguchi method and response surface method.


CIRP Annals ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 233-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Meier ◽  
B. Buff ◽  
R. Laurischkat ◽  
V. Smukala

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Sebastiani ◽  
A. Brosius ◽  
A. E. Tekkaya ◽  
W. Homberg ◽  
M. Kleiner

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document