Efficient Prediction of Contact Behavior in a 6-High Rolling Mill With Continuously Variable Crown Intermediate Rolls

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Feng Zhang ◽  
Arif S. Malik

Continuously Variable Crown (CVC) shifting mechanisms represent a control technology with wide range of capability to influence the thickness profile and flatness (shape) of metal strip and sheet in rolling-type manufacturing processes. Further, because of the efficiency and extensive control capability to operate on thin-gauge, high-strength ferrous alloys, the 6-high mill with CVC profiles machined onto the intermediate rolls (IR) represents a popular mill configuration. This is because of the large control range for the strip thickness profile and flatness, which results from lateral shifting of the CVC intermediate rolls. However, together with this efficiency and capability comes very complex contact behaviors between the rolls and strip, including highly non-linear contact force distribution, loss of contact, asymmetric roll wear, unwanted strip wedge profiles, and the need to apply corrective roll tilting. Therefore, for most effective industry use of 6-high mills with intermediate roll CVC shifting, a rapid and accurate mathematical rolling model is needed to predict and account for these complex contact behaviors. This paper introduces an efficient roll-stack computational model capable of simulating such rolling mills under steady-state conditions. The model formulation applies the simplified mixed finite element method (SM-FEM), which is adapted to simulate asymmetric 6-high CVC mill contact behaviors. Results for a specific case study compare favorably to those obtained from a large-scale commercial finite element simulation, yet require a small fraction of the associated computational time and effort.

Author(s):  
Tzanio Kolev ◽  
Paul Fischer ◽  
Misun Min ◽  
Jack Dongarra ◽  
Jed Brown ◽  
...  

Efficient exploitation of exascale architectures requires rethinking of the numerical algorithms used in many large-scale applications. These architectures favor algorithms that expose ultra fine-grain parallelism and maximize the ratio of floating point operations to energy intensive data movement. One of the few viable approaches to achieve high efficiency in the area of PDE discretizations on unstructured grids is to use matrix-free/partially assembled high-order finite element methods, since these methods can increase the accuracy and/or lower the computational time due to reduced data motion. In this paper we provide an overview of the research and development activities in the Center for Efficient Exascale Discretizations (CEED), a co-design center in the Exascale Computing Project that is focused on the development of next-generation discretization software and algorithms to enable a wide range of finite element applications to run efficiently on future hardware. CEED is a research partnership involving more than 30 computational scientists from two US national labs and five universities, including members of the Nek5000, MFEM, MAGMA and PETSc projects. We discuss the CEED co-design activities based on targeted benchmarks, miniapps and discretization libraries and our work on performance optimizations for large-scale GPU architectures. We also provide a broad overview of research and development activities in areas such as unstructured adaptive mesh refinement algorithms, matrix-free linear solvers, high-order data visualization, and list examples of collaborations with several ECP and external applications.


2014 ◽  
Vol 513-517 ◽  
pp. 1919-1926 ◽  
Author(s):  
Min Zhang ◽  
Zu Deng Yu ◽  
Yang Liu ◽  
Hong Li

In this article, the numerical scheme of a linearized Crank-Nicolson (C-N) method based on H1-Galerkin mixed finite element method (H1-GMFEM) is studied and analyzed for nonlinear coupled BBM equations. In this method, the spatial direction is approximated by an H1-GMFEM and the time direction is discretized by a linearized Crank-Nicolson method. Some optimal a priori error results are derived for four important variables. For conforming the theoretical analysis, a numerical test is presented.


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