06 Sheet-Metal Forming
06 Sheet-Metal Forming
Sheet-metal forming
Subjects of interest Introduction/objectives Deformation geometry Forming equipments Shearing and blanking Bending Stretch forming Deep drawing Forming limit criteria Defects in formed parts
Suranaree University of Technology
Tapany Udomphol
Jan-Mar 2007
Objectives
Methods of sheet metal processes such as stretching, shearing, blanking, bending, deep drawing, redrawing are introduced. Variables in sheet forming process will be discussed together with formability and test methods. Defects occurring during the forming process will be emphasised. The solutions to such defect problems will also be given.
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Introduction
Sheet metal forming is a process that materials undergo permanent deformation by cold forming to produce a variety of complex three dimensional shapes. The process is carried out in the plane of sheet by tensile forces with high ratio of surface area to thickness. Friction conditions at the tool-metal interface are very important and controlled by press conditions, lubrication, tool material and surface condition, and strip surface condition. High rate of production and formability is determined by its mechanical properties.
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2) Contoured flanged parts, i.e., parts with stretch flanges and shrink flanges. 3) Curved sections. 4) Deep-recessed parts, i.e., cups and boxes with either vertical or sloping walls. 5) Shallow-recessed parts, i.e., dishshaped, beaded, embossed and corrugated parts.
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Blanking
Stretching
Deep drawing
Coining
Stamping
Ironing
Folding
Bending
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3 2
1 = 2 = 3
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a) Uniaxial
b) Biaxial
Hydrostatic stresses cannot contribute to shape change but involve in failure processes
c) Hydrostatic
Tensile crack growth or void formation Compressive hinder crack, close void.
Jan-Mar 2007
In sheet deformation processes (i.e., sheet metal forming, vacuum forming, blow moulding), the workpiece is subjected to two dimensional biaxial stresses. (also depending on geometry)
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In bulk deformation processes (i.e. forging, rolling and extrusion), the workpiece is subjected to triaxial stresses, which are normally compressive.
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Deformation geometry
Plane stress
Principal stresses 1 and 2 are set up together with their associated strain in the x-y plane. The sheet is free to contact (not constrained) in the 3 (z) direction. There is strain in this direction but no stress, thus 3 = 0., resulting in biaxial stress system. Since the stress are effectively confined to one plane, this stress system is known as plane stress.
Plane stress condition
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Plane strain
Deformation (strain) often occurs in only two dimensions (parallel to 1 and 2). 3 is finite, preventing deformation (strain) in the z direction (constrained), which is known as plane strain. Example: the extrusion of a thin sheet where material in the centre is constrained in the z direction.
Plane strain condition
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Forming equipments
Forming equipments include
www.ptu.tu-darmstadt.de/.../ictmp/img00011.gif
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Forming machines
Using mechanical or hydraulic presses. 1) Mechanical presses - energy stored in a flywheel is transferred to the movable slide on the down stroke of the press. - quick - acting , short stroke. 2) Hydraulic presses - slower - acting, longer stroke.
Jan-Mar 2007
Actions of presses
(according to number of slides, which can be operated independently of each other.)
1) Single - action press - one slide - vertical direction 2) Double - action press - two slides - the second action is used to operated the hold-down, which prevents wrinkling in deep drawing. 3) Triple - action press - two actions above the die, one action below the die.
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Example:
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Tooling
Basic tools used with a metalworking press are the punch and the die.
Punch A convex tool for making holes by shearing , or making surface or displacing metal with a hammer. Die A concave die, which is the female part as opposed to punch which is the male part.
Die materials: High alloy steels heat treated for the punches and dies.
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Compound dies
Several operations can be performed on the same piece in one stroke of the press. Combined processes and create a complex product in one shot. Used in metal stamping processes of thin sheets.
www.lyons.com
Compound die
www.deltatooling.co.jp/
Transfer dies
Transfer dies are also called compounding type dies. The part is moved from station to station within the press for each operation.
Transfer die
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www.bgprecision.com
pilot
1) Punch holder which holds punch plate connected with blanking and piecing punches for cutting the metal sheet. 2) Die block consists of die holder and die plate which was designed to give the desired shape of the product. 3) Pilot is used to align metal sheet at the correct position before blanking at each step. 4) Striper plate used for a) alignment of punch and die blocks b) navigate the punch into the die using harden striper inserts and c) remove the cut piece from the punch.
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Forming method
There are a great variety of sheet metal forming methods, mainly using shear and tensile forces in the operation.
Progressive forming Rubber hydroforming Bending and contouring Spinning processes Explosive forming
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Progressive forming
Punches and dies are designed so that successive stages in the forming of the part are carried out in the same die on each stroke of the press. Progressive dies are also known as multi-stage dies. Example: progressive blanking and piercing of flat washer.
Punch
washers
The strip is fed from left to right. The first punch is to make the hole of the washer. The washer is then blanked from the strip.
washer
Jan-Mar 2007
Progressive die
Metal sheet used in blanking process
www.hillengr.com
www.bestechtool.com
Progressive die
Optimise the material usage. Determining factors are 1) volume of production 2) the complexity of the shape
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Rubber hydroforming
Using a pad of rubber or polyurethane as a die. A metal blank is placed over the form block, which is fastened to the bed of a single - action hydraulic press. During forming the rubber (placed in the retainer box on the upper platen of the press) transmits a nearly uniform hydrostatic pressure against the sheet. Pressure ~ 10 MPa, and where higher local pressure can be obtained by using auxiliary tooling.
Guerin process
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Hydroforming
www.egr.msu.edu
Stamp hydroforming machine setup with a fluid supplied from one side of the draw blank
A drawing of hydroforming setup with fluid supplied from to both sides of the materials.
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Bendmachine
Wiper rolls
Form block
(a) Three-roll bender: sometimes does not provide uniform deformation in thin-gauge sheet due to the midpoint of the span localisation of the strain. Often need the forth roll. (b) Wiper-type bender: The contour is formed by successive hammer blows on the sheet, which is clamped at one end against the form block. Wiper rolls must be pressed against the block with a uniform pressure supplied by a hydraulic cylinder. (c) Wrap forming: The sheet is compressed against a form block, and at the same time a longitudinal stress is applied to prevent buckling and wrinkling. Ex: coiling of a spring around a mandrel.
Clamp Clamp
Tension
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www.rollfab.com.au www.macri.it
www.diydata.com
www.lathes.co.uk
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Spinning processes
Deep parts of circular symmetry such as tank heads, television cones.
Materials: aluminium and alloys, high strength - low alloy steels, copper, brass and alloys, stainless steel,
The metal blank is clamped against a form block, which is rotated at high speed. The blank is progressively formed against the block, by a manual tool or by means of small-diameter work rolls.
Note: (a) no change in thickness but diameter, (b) diameter equals to blank diameter but thicknessTapany Udomphol stays the same. Jan-Mar
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Explosive forming
Produce large parts with a relatively low production lot size. The sheet metal blank is placed over a die cavity and an explosive charge is detonated in medium (water) at an appropriate standoff distance from the blank at a very high velocity. The shockwave propagating from the explosion serves as a friction-less punch
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The fracture then propagates inward to provide complete separation. Clearance (normally 2-10% thickness) clean fracture surface. ragged fracture surface. greater distortion, greater energy required to separate metal.
Thickness
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clearance
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Pmax 0.7 u hL
where u h L The shearing force = the ultimate tensile strength = sheet thickness = total length of the sheared edge by making the edges of the cutting tool at an inclined angle
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Punching or piercing :
The shearing of the material when the metal inside the contour is discarded.
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www.americanmachinist.com/
Slitting : Cutting or
shearing along single lines to cut strips from a sheet or to cut along lines of a given length or contour in a sheet or workpiece.
Trimming : Operation of
cutting scrap off a partially or fully shaped part to an established trim line.
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Shaving : A secondary
shearing or cutting operation in which the surface of a previously cut edge is finished or smoothed by removing a minimal amount of stock.
Ironing : A continuous
thinning process and often accompanies deep drawing, i.e., thinning of the wall of a cylindrical cup by passing it though an ironing die.
Jan-Mar 2007
Bending
A process by which a straight length is transformed into a curved length. produce channels, drums, tanks.
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Bending
The bend radius R = the radius of curvature on the concave, or inside surface of the bend. Fibres on the outer surface are strained more than fibres on the inner surface are contracted. Fibres at the mid thickness is stretched.
Decrease in thickness (radius direction) at the bend to preserve the constancy of volume. R thickness on bending
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Condition: - No change in thickness - The neutral axis will remain at the centre fibre. - Circumferential stretch on the top surface ea = shrink on the bottom surface, eb R strain
1 e a = eb = (2 R / h ) + 1
Eq.1
Jan-Mar 2007
b/h
biaxiality
Strain, ductility
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Springback
Dimensional change of the formed part after releasing the pressure of the forming tool due to the changes in strain produced by elastic recovery. Yield stress Elastic modulus
Plastic strain Spring back Springback is encountered in all forming operations, but most easily occurs in bending.
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For aluminium alloys and austenitic stainless steels in a number of cold-rolled tempers, approximate springback in bending can be expressed by
Ro Ro Ro = 4 +1 3 Rf Eh Eh
Where Ro Rf and Ro < Rf
Eq.2
= the radius of curvature before release of load = the radius of curvature after release of lead
Pb =
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2(R + h / 2 )
o Lh
tan
Eq.3
2
Jan-Mar 2007
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Tube bending
Bending of tube and structural material for industry, architecture, medical, refinery. Heat induction and hot slap bending require the heating of pipe, tube or structural shapes. Heat Induction bending is typically a higher cost bending process and is primarily used in large diameter material.
Tube bending
Jan-Mar 2007
www.dynabil.com
Stretch forming
Forming by using tensile forces to stretch the material over a tool or form block. used most extensively in the aircraft industry to produce parts of large radius of curvature. (normally for uniform cross section). required materials with appreciable ductility. Springback is largely eliminated because the stress gradient is relatively uniform.
Stretch forming feasible for aluminium, stainless steel, titanium.
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Ram
Ram
Using a hydraulic driven ram (normally vertical). Sheet is gripped by two jaws at its edges. Form block is slowly raised by the ram to deform sheet above its yield point. The sheet is strained plastically to the required final shape.
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Diffuse necking
(a limit to forming)
In biaxial tension, the necking which occurs in uniaxial tension is inhibited if 2/1 > 1/2, and the materials then develops diffuse necking. (not visible) The limit of uniform deformation in strip loading occurs at a strain equals to the strain-hardening exponent n. = n
u
Localised necking
Plastic instability of a thin sheet will occur in the form of a narrow localised neck. followed by fracture of the sheet. Normal strain along X2 must be zero.
u = 2n
Jan-Mar 2007
Deep drawing
The metalworking process used for shaping flat sheets into cup-shaped articles. Examples: bathtubs, shell cases, automobile panels.
Deep drawing of a cylindrical cup
Pressing the metal blank of appropriate size into a shaped die with a punch.
Before drawing
After drawing
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Punch
It is best done with double-action press. Using a blank holder or a holddown ring
Holddown ring
Complex interaction between metal and die depending on geometry. No precise mathematical description can be used to represent the processes in simple terms.
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Flange
Change in radius
Biaxial
Biaxial
Clearance between the punch and the die > 10-20% thickness.
Metal in the cup wall is subjected to a circumference strain, or hoop and a radial tensile strain. Metal at the flange is bent and straightened as well as subjected to a tensile stress at the same time.
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Redrawing
Use successive drawing operations by reducing a cup or drawn part to a smaller diameter and increased height known as redrawing. Examples: slender cups such as cartridge case and closedend tubes. 1) Direct or regular redrawing : smaller diameter is produced by means of a hold-down ring. The metal must be bent at the punch and unbent at the die radii see Fig (a). Tapered die allows lower punch load, Fig (b). 2) Reverse or indirect redrawing : the cup is turned inside out the outside surface becomes the inside surface, Fig (c). Better control of wrinkling and no geometrical limitations to the use of a holddown ring.
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- varies with length of travel - mainly from hold down pressure - after the cup has reached the maximum thickness.
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Do LDR D p
Where
e max
Eq.4
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www.drawform.com
Round shell
Different flow patterns at sides and corners. Corners require similar flow as round shells while sides need simple bending. The corner radii control the maximum draw depth. Centre to center distance of corners 6 x corner radius Bottom radius corner radius
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Rectangular shell
Jan-Mar 2007
To improve drawability
To avoid failures in the thin parts (at the punch or flange), metal in that part need to be strengthened, or weaken the metal in other parts (to correct the weakest link). If sufficient friction is generated between punch and workpiece, more of the forming load is carried by the thicker parts. Concerning about crystallographic texture (slip system), degree of anisotropy or strain ratio R.
The dependence of limiting draw ratio on R and work hardening rate, n
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The plastic strain ratio R measures the normal anisotropy, which denotes high resistance to thinning in the thickness direction.
ln(w / ln(wow)/ w) R = ln(h / h) ln(ho / h) R=
o o
Eq.5
Where wo and w are the initial and final width ho and h are the initial and final thickness. But it is difficult to measure thickness on thin sheets, therefore we have
ln(wo / w) R= ln( wL / wo Lo )
Eq.6
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L Lo = 0.30 Lo w wo = 0.16 wo
R=
From Fig. 20-16 Dieter page 673, the limiting draw ratio ~ 2.7
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Tensile test only provides ductility, work hardening, but it is in a uniaxial tension with frictionless, which cannot truly represent material behaviours obtained from unequal biaxial stretching occurring in sheet metal forming. Sheet metal formability tests are designed to measure the ductility of a materials under condition similar to those found in sheet metal forming.
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Grid analysis (a) before (b) after deformation of sheet. Major strain 1(%)
120 100
Failure
80
2 1
60 40 20
2
Safe
AK steel
-20
20
40
60
80
100
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Major strain
120
100
80
2 1
60 40 20
-40
-20
20
40
60
80
100
Jan-Mar 2007
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Springback problem
Edge conditions for blanking. Local necking or thinning or buckling and wrinkling in regions of compressive stress. Springback tolerance problems. Cracks near the punch region in deep drawing minimised by increasing punch radius, lowering punch load.
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Radial cracks in the flanges and edge of the cup due to not sufficient ductility to withstand large circumferential shrinking. Wrinkling of the flanges or the edges of the cup resulting from buckling of the sheet (due to circumferential compressive stresses) solved by using sufficient hold-down pressure to suppress the buckling. Surface blemishes due to large surface area. EX: orange peeling especially in large grain sized metals because each grain tends to deform independently use finer grained metals. Mechanical fibering has little effect on formability. Crystallographic fibering or preferred orientation may have a large effect. Ex: when bend line is parallel to the rolling direction, or earing in deep drawn cup due to anisotropic properties.
Earing in drawn can
aluminium.matter.org.uk Suranaree University of Technology
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Stretcher strains or worms (flamelike patterns of depressions). Associated with yield point elongation. The metal in the stretcher strains has been strained an amount = B, while the remaining received essentially zero strain. The elongation of the part is given by some intermediate strain A.
Stretcher strain in low-carbon steel.
A B
The number of stretcher strains increase during deformation. The strain will increase until the when the entire part is covered it has a strain equal to B. Solution: give the steel sheet a small cold reduction (usually 0.5-2% reduction in thickness). Ex: temper-rolling, skin-rolling to eliminate yield point.
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References
Dieter, G.E., Mechanical metallurgy, 1988, SI metric edition, McGraw-Hill, ISBN 0-07-100406-8. Edwards, L. and Endean, M., Manufacturing with materials, 1990, Butterworth Heinemann, ISBN 0-7506-2754-9.
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