Ch4 Review
Ch4 Review
Ch4 Review
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• Material behavior in metal forming
Y f = K n
K = strength coefficient
n = strain hardening exponent
*Flow curve based on true stress and true strain
2
• Flow stress
3
• Cold working
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHvx4oM9UG0 4
• Cold working (cont.)
➢ Advantages
– Better accuracy, closer tolerances
– Better surface finish
– Strain hardening increases strength and hardness
– No heating of work required
➢ Disadvantages
– Higher forces and power required in the deformation operation
– Ductility and strain hardening limit the amount of forming that can be
done
❖In some cases, metal must be annealed to allow further deformation
❖In other cases, metal is simply not ductile enough to be cold worked
5
• Heat treatment after cold working
➢ Heat treatment at annealing temperature affects tensile strength
and ductility
600 60
tensile strength 1. Recovery
ductility (%EL)
50 2. Recrystallization
500 3. Grain Growth
40
400 30
ductility 20
300
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• Warm working
➢ Performed at temperatures above room temperature but below
recrystallization temperature
➢ Dividing line between cold working and warm working often
expressed in terms of melting point:
– 0.3Tm, where Tm is absolute melting temperature for metal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jxI_g5QHEOE
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• Warm working (cont.)
➢ Advantages
– Lower forces and power than in cold working
– More intricate work geometries possible
– Need for annealing may be reduced or eliminated
– Low spring back
➢ Disadvantages
₋ Scaling of part surface
8
• Hot working
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-oQifocjaY
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• Why hot working? (cont.)
• Advantages
– Workpiece shape can be significantly altered
– Lower forces and power required
– Metals that usually fracture in cold working can be hot formed
– Strength properties of product are generally isotropic
– No work hardening occurs during forming
• Disadvantages
– Lower dimensional accuracy in case of bulk forming
– Higher total energy required (due to the thermal energy to heat the
workpiece)
– Work surface oxidation (scale), poorer surface finish
– Shorter tool life
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• Rolling
2 F L N
Power (in kW) =
60,000 N = rolling speed (RPM)
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• Rolling (cont.)
– Rolling power derivation
∆𝑡
𝐿≈ 2𝑅 = 𝑅∆𝑡
2
𝐿 Assumption
𝑎≈
2 for flat rolling
𝐹𝐿
R 𝑇 ≈ 𝐹𝑎 =
2
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• Rolling: some characteristics of rolled metals
Dimensional Tolerances
– Thickness tolerances for cold-rolled sheets range from ±0.
01~0.05 mm; tolerances are much greater for hot-rolled
plates.
– Flatness tolerances are within ±15 mm/m for cold rolling
and ±55 mm/m for hot rolling
Surface Roughness
– Cold rolling can produce a very fine surface finish
– Cold-rolled sheets products may not require additional
finishing operations
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• Open-die forging: the simplest forging operation
– Open-die forging is where a solid workpiece is placed
between two flat dies and reduced in height by
compressing it
– Workpiece is deformed uniformly under frictionless
conditions
– Barreling occurs because of the friction force. It can be
reduced by adding lubrications
Barreling is caused by frictional forces that oppose the outward flow of the workpiece at the
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die interfaces. Barreling is minimized by using an effective lubricant
• Open-die forging (cont.)
– The forging force, F, in an open-die forging operation on
a solid cylindrical workpiece can be estimated from
2r
F = Y f r 1 +
2
3h
Yf = flow stress of the material
µ = coefficient of friction between the workpiece and die
r = the instantaneous radius
h = height of the workpiece
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– The reaction force
F = YA1 A0 h0
A1 =
h1
1
F, v
K n d
K 1n
Y = 0
=
1 n +1 Averaged by energy h0 d0
for work calculation
⇒ 𝑑𝑊 = 𝐹𝑑 𝑑𝑖𝑠𝑝 = −𝐹𝑑ℎ
ℎ1 ℎ1
𝑊 = න 𝑑𝑊 = − න 𝐹𝑑ℎ
ℎ0 ℎ0
Compressive force F
𝐹 ℎ1
𝑊 ≈summation of rectangles area
𝐹 ℎ𝑚
𝐹 ℎ𝑛
…… Compressive height h
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ℎ1 ℎ0
• Open-die forging (cont.)
– The directional flow of the material in forging
Folding
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CU3AzWdl2fo
– The forming process affects the grain size
• Finer grain have higher yield strength and toughness and
lower internal strains and stresses
• The process of forging and grain size
Heating
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• Extrusion and drawing (cont.)
– Three basic types of extrusion:
a) Direct,
b) Indirect, and
c) hydrostatic
Less use: lateral Direct
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Indirect Hydrostatic Lateral
• The drawing process
– Cross section of a long rod or wire is reduced by pulling it
through a draw die
– Drawing force: 𝐴0
𝑌𝑎𝑣𝑔 ~𝜀 = ln
• Under ideal and frictionless conditions, is 𝐴𝑓
Ao
F = Yavg A f ln
A
f
• With friction and the redundant work, is
A 2
F = Yavg A f 1 + ln o +
A f 3 Unit: radian
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Example 1
In the flow curve for pure aluminum, the strength coefficient K =
175 MPa and strain-hardening exponent n = 0.2. In the forming
operation, the final true strain ε = 0.75. Determine the flow stress,
average flow stress, and specific energy the metal experienced.
Solution:
𝑌𝑓 = 𝐾𝜀 𝑛 = 175𝑀𝑃𝑎 × 0.750.2 ≈ 165.2𝑀𝑃𝑎
𝐾𝜀 𝑛 175𝑀𝑃𝑎 × 0.750.2
𝑌𝑎𝑣𝑔 = = ≈ 137.7𝑀𝑃𝑎
1+𝑛 1 + 0.2
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𝜀 = ln( ) ≈ 0.13
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𝐾𝜀 𝑛 275𝑀𝑃𝑎 × 0.130.15
𝑌𝑎𝑣𝑔 = ≈ ≈ 175.6𝑀𝑃𝑎 23
1+𝑛 1 + 0.15
Example 2 (cont.)
Solution:
Roll force:
𝐹 = 𝐿𝑤𝑌𝑎𝑣𝑔 ≈ 27.4𝑚𝑚 × 300𝑚𝑚 × 175.6𝑀𝑃𝑎 ≈ 1.44𝑀𝑁
Power:
𝑃 = 2𝑇𝜔 = 2𝑇 × 2𝜋𝑁 ≈ 2 × 19779.9𝑁𝑚 × 2𝜋 × 50𝑟𝑝𝑚
𝑃 ≈ 207.1𝑘𝑊
2
2 × 0.1 × 36.1𝑚𝑚
𝐹 ≈ 332.1𝑀𝑃𝑎 × 𝜋 × 36.1𝑚𝑚 × 1+ ≈ 1.45𝑀𝑁
3 × 36𝑚𝑚
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Example 4
Wire is drawn through a die with die angle = 15° at a speed = 1
m/s. Starting diameter = 2.5 mm and final diameter = 2.0 mm. The
coefficient of friction at the work-die interface = 0.07. The metal
has a strength coefficient K = 205 MPa and a strain-hardening
exponent n = 0.2. Determine the draw stress, force and power.
Solution:
𝐴0 2.5𝑚𝑚 2
𝜀 = ln = ln( 2
) ≈ 0.45
𝐴𝑓 2.0𝑚𝑚
Draw stress:
𝐾𝜀 𝑛 205𝑀𝑃𝑎 × 0.450.2
𝑌𝑎𝑣𝑔 = ≈ ≈ 145.5𝑀𝑃𝑎
1+𝑛 1 + 0.2
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Example 4 (cont.)
Solution:
Draw force:
𝜇 𝐴0 2
𝐹 = 𝑌𝑎𝑣𝑔 𝐴𝑓 1+ ln + 𝛼
𝛼 𝐴𝑓 3
𝛼 = 15° ≈ 0.26𝑟𝑎𝑑
2
0.07 2.5𝑚𝑚 2 2
𝐹 ≈ 145.5𝑀𝑃𝑎 × 𝜋 × 1𝑚𝑚 × 1+ ln + × 0.26
0.26 2𝑚𝑚 2 3
𝐹 ≈ 338.3𝑁
Draw power:
𝑃 = 𝐹𝑣 ≈ 338.3𝑁 × 1𝑚/𝑠 = 338.3𝑊 28