Comparison of the deep drawability of aluminum and steel using numerical simulation experiments

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Date

2005

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

American Institute of Physics Inc.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
Manufacturing Engineering
(2003)
Opened in 2003 with the aim to graduate experts in the field of machine-production, our Department is among the firsts in our country to offer education in English. The Manufacturing Engineering program focuses on the manufacturing technologies that shape materials from raw materials to final products by means of analytical, experimental and numerical modeling methods. First Manufacturing Engineering Program to be engineered by Müdek, our department aims to graduate creative and innovative Manufacturing Engineers that are knowledgeable in the current technology, and are able to use production resources in an effective and sustainable way that never disregards environmental facts. As the first Department to implement the Cooperative Education Program at Atılım University in coordination with institutions from the industry, the Manufacturing Engineering offers a practice-oriented approach in education with its laboratory infrastructure and research opportunities. The curriculum at our department is supported by current engineering software, and catered to creating engineers equipped to meet the needs of the production industry.

Journal Issue

Abstract

Sheet metal forming processes, especially deep drawing processes give diverse results by various materials. Extreme differences occur between steel sheets and aluminum sheets. The main causes of these differences are variances in micro- and macroscopic material properties, such as anisotropy. In this study, the behavior of two distinct materials, steel and aluminum alloy, during an axisymmetrical cup drawing operation has been studied numerically. For this purpose, finite element (FE) simulations of a simple cup drawing process, which was studied in the benchmarks of the NUMISHEET 2002 have been conducted using a commercial dynamic-explicit FE-analysis package. The materials analyzed have been 6111-T4 aluminum alloy and mild steel graded as deep drawing quality. Basic process parameters, which are the blank holding force and the lubrication condition, have been varied to obtain a "successful" product and the process windows for these two materials have been compared and investigated. Thickness distributions in the blank, force requirements for the process and product quality have been used for the basis of comparison. The results are also compared with an analytical model developed by Ramaekers. © 2005 American Institute of Physics.

Description

American Iron and Steel Institute; Daimler Chrysler Corporation; Ford Motor Corporation; General Motors Corporation

Keywords

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Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Citation

2

WoS Q

Scopus Q

Q4

Source

AIP Conference Proceedings -- NUMISHEET 2005: 6th International Conference and Workshop on Numerical Simulation of 3D Sheet Metal Forming Processes -- 15 August 2005 through 19 August 2005 -- Detroit, MI

Volume

778 A

Issue

Start Page

119

End Page

124

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