Evaluation of the sheared edge of the metal blanking process with one ductile damage model combined the induced anisotropy

2010 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. N23-N27 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Aluru ◽  
F.-L. Wen ◽  
Y.-L. Shen

ABSTRACTA numerical study is undertaken to simulate failure of solder joint caused by cyclic shear deformation. A progressive ductile damage model is incorporated into the rate-dependent elastic-viscoplastic finite element analysis, resulting in the capability of simulating damage evolution and eventual failure through crack formation. It is demonstrated that quantitative information of fatigue life, as well as the temporal and spatial evolution of fatigue cracks, can be explicitly obtained.


2012 ◽  
Vol 463-464 ◽  
pp. 1047-1051
Author(s):  
M. Rahafrooz ◽  
M. Sanjari ◽  
M. Moradi ◽  
Danial Ghodsiyeh

The Continuum Damage Mechanics is a branch of applied mechanics that used to predict the initiation of cracks in metal forming process. In this article, damage definition and ductile damage model are explained, and also ductile damage model is applied to predict initiation of fracture in gas metal forming process with ABAQUS/EXPLICIT simulation. In this method instead of punch, the force is applied by air pressure. In this study, first the ductile damage criterion and its relations are taken into account and, subsequently, the process of gas-aid formation process is put into consideration and ductile damage model for prediction of rupture area is simulated using ABAQUS simulation software. Eventually, the process of formation via gas on the aluminum with total thickness of 0.24 [mm] was experimentally investigated and the results acquired from experiment were compared with relating simulations. The effect of various parameters such as radius of edge matrix, gas pressure and blank temperature has been evaluated. Simulation was compared with experimental results and good agreement was observed.


2020 ◽  
pp. 105678952095804
Author(s):  
Kai Zhang ◽  
Houssem Badreddine ◽  
Naila Hfaiedh ◽  
Khemais Saanouni ◽  
Jianlin Liu

This paper deals with the prediction of ductile damage based on CDM approach fully coupled with advanced elastoplastic constitutive equations. This fully coupled damage model is developed based on the total energy equivalence assumption under the thermodynamics of irreversible processes framework with state variables. In this model, the damage evolution is enhanced by accounting for both stress triaxiality and Lode angle. The proposed constitutive equations are implemented into Finite Element (FE) code ABAQUS/Explicit through a user material subroutine (VUMAT). The material parameters are determined by the hybrid experimental-numerical method using various tensile and shear tests. Validation of the proposed model has been done using different tests of two aluminum alloys (Al6061-T6 and Al6014-T4). Through comparisons of numerical simulations with experimental results for different loading paths, the predictive capabilities of the proposed model have been shown. The model is found to be able to capture the initiation as well as propagation of macro-crack in sheet and bulk metals during their forming processes.


2011 ◽  
Vol 266 ◽  
pp. 122-125
Author(s):  
Bo Wang ◽  
Jing Bo Chen

Sheared edge quality of micro IT parts is an important standard to evaluate product quality. In this paper, a prediction model of sheared edge quality based on grey prediction is studied. By mapping the stroke and the burr width to be the time increment and the eigenvalue of grey system, the grey prediction model was established. The dynamic regularity of burr in actual production was attained from the precision blanking experiment and the prediction of burr width was performed. The results show that the model can predict burr width accurately and needs less sampling data. Thus, it is fit for the requirement of manufacturing.


Author(s):  
Youssef Hammi ◽  
Mark F. Horstemeyer ◽  
Doug J. Bammann

An anisotropic ductile damage description is motivated from fracture mechanisms and physical observations in Al-Si-Mg aluminum alloys with second phases. Ductile damage is induced by the classical process of nucleation of voids at inclusions, followed by their growth and coalescence. These mechanisms are related to different microstructural and length scale parameters like the fracture toughness, the void size, the intervoid ligament distance, etc. The classical thermodynamic constraints of irreversible processes with material state variables are used to model the tensorial damage evolution coupled to the Bammann-Chiesa-Johnson (BCJ) rate-dependent plasticity. The damage-plasticity coupling is based on the effective stress concept, assuming the total energy equivalence, and written through a deviatoric damage effect tensor on the deviatoric part and through the trace of the second rank damage tensor on the hydrostatic part. The damage rate tensor is additively decomposed into a nucleation rate tensor, a void growth rate scalar, and a coalescence rate tensor. The induced damage anisotropy is mainly driven by the nucleation, which evolves as a function of the absolute value of the plastic strain rate tensor. Finally, some experimental data of cast A356 aluminum alloy are correlated with predictive void-crack evolution to illustrate the applicability of the anisotropic damage model.


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