Sheet metal forming and springback simulation by means of a new reduced integration solid-shell finite element technology

2011 ◽  
Vol 200 (5-8) ◽  
pp. 454-476 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Schwarze ◽  
Ivaylo N. Vladimirov ◽  
Stefanie Reese
2011 ◽  
Vol 473 ◽  
pp. 875-880 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yalin Kiliclar ◽  
Roman Laurischkat ◽  
Stefanie Reese ◽  
Horst Meier

The principle of robot based incremental sheet metal forming is based on flexible shaping by means of a freely programmable path-synchronous movement of two tools, which are operated by two industrial robots. The final shape is produced by the incremental infeed of the forming tool in depth direction and its movement along the geometry’s contour in lateral direction. The main problem during the forming process is the influence on the dimensional accuracy resulting from the compliance of the involved machine structures and the springback effects of the workpiece. The project aims to predict these deviations caused by resiliences and to carry out a compensative path planning based on this prediction. Therefore a planning tool is implemented which compensates the robot’s compliance and the springback effects of the sheet metal. Finite element analysis using a material model developed at the Institute of Applied Mechanics (IFAM) [1] has been used for the simulation of the forming process. The finite strain constitutive model combines nonlinear kinematic and isotropic hardening and is derived in a thermodynamical setting. It is based on the multiplicative split of the deformation gradient in the context of hyperelasticity. The kinematic hardening component represents a continuum extension of the classical rheological model of Armstrong–Frederick kinematic hardening which is widely adopted as capable of representing the above metal hardening effects. The major problem of low-order finite elements used to simulate thin sheet structures, such as used for the experiments, is locking, a non-physical stiffening effect. Recent research focuses on the large deformation version of a new eight-node solid-shell finite element based on reduced integration with hourglass stabilization. In the solid-shell formulation developed at IFAM ([2], [3]) the enhanced assumed strain (EAS) concept as well as the assumed natural strain (ANS) concept are implemented to circumvent locking. These tools are very important to obtain a good correlation between experiment and simulation.


2011 ◽  
Vol 474-476 ◽  
pp. 251-254
Author(s):  
Jian Jun Wu ◽  
Wei Liu ◽  
Yu Jing Zhao

The multi-step forward finite element method is presented for the numerical simulation of multi-step sheet metal forming. The traditional constitutive relationship is modified according to the multi-step forming processes, and double spreading plane based mapping method is used to obtain the initial solutions of the intermediate configurations. To verify the multi-step forward FEM, the two-step simulation of a stepped box deep-drawing part is carried out as it is in the experiment. The comparison with the results of the incremental FEM and test shows that the multi-step forward FEM is efficient for the numerical simulation of multi-step sheet metal forming processes.


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