Design and Development of a Biaxial Tensile Test Device for a Thin Film Specimen

Author(s):  
Takahiro Namazu ◽  
Yuji Nagai ◽  
Nobuyuki Naka ◽  
Nozomu Araki ◽  
Shozo Inoue

In this article, the design and development of a biaxial tensile test device and its specimen are described. The device, which was designed for evaluating the mechanical characteristics of a thin film specimen under in-plane uniaxial and biaxial tensile stress states, consists of four sets of a piezoelectric actuator, a load cell, a linear variable differential transformer (LVDT), and an actuator case including lever structures with displacement amplification function. The structures fabricated by wire electrical discharge machining are able to amplify the actuator’s displacement by a factor of 3.8 along the tensile direction. The biaxial test specimen prepared using conventional micromachining processes is composed of a cross-shaped film section and chucking parts supported by silicon springs. After square holes in four chuck parts are respectively hooked with four loading poles, the film section is tensioned to the directions where the poles get away from the center of the specimen. Tensile strain rate can be individually controlled for each tensile direction. Raman spectroscopic stress analyses demonstrated that the developed biaxial tensile test device was able to accurately apply not only uniaxial but also biaxial tensile stress to a single-crystal silicon (SCS) film specimen.

Author(s):  
Luis Fernando Puente Medellín ◽  
Víctor Alfonso Ramírez Elías ◽  
Antonio de Jesús Balvantín García ◽  
Perla Iris Vázquez Gómez ◽  
José Angel Diosdado De la Peña

2021 ◽  
Vol 883 ◽  
pp. 303-308
Author(s):  
Peter Hetz ◽  
Matthias Lenzen ◽  
Martin Kraus ◽  
Marion Merklein

Numerical process design leads to cost and time savings in sheet metal forming processes. Therefore, a modeling of the material behavior is required to map the flow properties of sheet metal. For the identification of current yield criteria, the yield strength and the hardening behavior as well as the Lankford coefficients are taken into account. By considering the anisotropy as a function of rolling direction and stress state, the prediction quality of anisotropic materials is improved by a more accurate modeling of the yield locus curve. According to the current state of the art, the layer compression test is used to determine the corresponding Lankford coefficient for the biaxial tensile stress state. However, the test setup and the test procedure is quite challenging compared to other tests for the material characterization. Due to this, the test is only of limited suitability if only the Lankford coefficient has to be determined. In this contribution, a simplified test is presented. It is a reduction of the layer compression test to one single sheet layer. So the Lankford coefficient for the biaxial tensile stress state can be analyzed with a significantly lower test effort. The results prove the applicability of the proposed test for an easy and time efficient characterization of the biaxial Lankford coefficient.


2018 ◽  
Vol 67 (2) ◽  
pp. 027101
Author(s):  
Di Lin-Jia ◽  
Dai Xian-Ying ◽  
Song Jian-Jun ◽  
Miao Dong-Ming ◽  
Zhao Tian-Long ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 725 ◽  
pp. 255-260
Author(s):  
Shohei Ochiai ◽  
Akinori Yamanaka ◽  
Toshihiko Kuwabara

To improve the accuracy of forming simulations for sheet metal, the use of material models calibrated by multiaxial material tests is essential. Adequate material models can be calibrated on the basis of the contours of equal plastic work obtained by multiaxial material tests. However, because the tests often require special experimental equipment, they are not widely used by the industry. This paper proposes a methodology for a numerical biaxial tensile test that uses ABAQUS, a popular commercial software package for finite element analysis. In numerical tests, an open-source user-defined material model (UMAT) is used to implement crystal plasticity models. In order to validate our methodology, we performed a numerical biaxial tensile test on a 6000-series aluminum alloy sheet, and the results were compared with those of biaxial tensile tests with a cruciform specimen. The results demonstrated that the proposed numerical biaxial tensile test provides a reasonable prediction of stress-strain curves and the contours of equal plastic work.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012.18 (0) ◽  
pp. 203-204
Author(s):  
Shohei IMANO ◽  
Susumu TAKAHASHI ◽  
Toshihiko KUWABARA

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