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Technical Paper

Design and Evaluation of an in-Plane Shear Test for Fracture Characterization of High Ductility Metals

2024-04-09
2024-01-2858
Fracture characterization of automotive metals under simple shear deformation is critical for the calibration of advanced fracture models employed in forming and crash simulations. In-plane shear fracture tests of high ductility materials have proved challenging since the sample edge fails first in uniaxial tension before the fracture limit in shear is reached at the center of the gage region. Although through-thickness machining is undesirable, it appears required to promote higher strains within the shear zone. The present study seeks to adapt existing in-plane shear geometries, which have otherwise been successful for many automotive materials, to have a local shear zone with a reduced thickness. It is demonstrated that a novel shear zone with a pocket resembling a “peanut” can promote shear fracture within the shear zone while reducing the risk for edge fracture. An emphasis was placed upon machinability and surface quality for the design of the pocket in the shear zone.
Technical Paper

Comparison of Bake Hardening Effects on AHSSs and Extruded Aluminum Alloys Applied in BEV Reinforcement Structures

2024-04-09
2024-01-2240
At the dawn of battery electric vehicles (BEVs), protection of automotive battery systems as well as passengers, especially from severe side impact, has become one of the latest and most challenging topics in the BEV crashworthiness designs. Accordingly, two material-selection concepts are being justified by the automotive industry: either heavy-gauge extruded aluminum alloys or light-gauge advanced high-strength steels (AHSSs) shall be the optimal materials to fabricate the reinforcement structures to satisfy both the safety and lightweight requirements. In the meantime, such a justification also motivated an ongoing C-STARTM (Cliffs Steel Tube as Reinforcement) Protection project, in which a series of modularized steel tube assemblies, were demonstrated to be more cost-efficient, sustainable, design-flexible, and manufacturable than the equivalent extruded aluminum alloy beams as BEV reinforcement structures.
Technical Paper

Enhancement of Physical and Mechanical Attributes of a Natural Fiber-Reinforced Composite for Engineering Applications

2024-04-09
2024-01-2237
A natural fiber based polymer composite has the advantage of being more environment-friendly from a life cycle standpoint when compared to composites reinforced with widely-used synthetic fibers. The former category of composites also poses reduced health risks during handling, formulation and usage. In the current study, jute polymer laminates are studied, with the polymeric resin being a general purpose polyester applied layer-by-layer on bi-directionally woven jute plies. Fabrication of flat laminates following the hand layup method combined with compression molding yields a jute polymer composite of higher initial stiffness and tensile strength, compared to commonly used plastics, coupled with consistency for engineering design applications. However, the weight-saving potential of a lightweight material such as the current jute-polyester composite can be further enhanced through improvement of its behavior under mechanical loading.
Technical Paper

The Influence of Sample Geometry on the Mechanical Properties and Failure Mechanisms of 6111 Aluminum Alloy Tensile Specimens

2024-04-09
2024-01-2280
This research focuses on the commercial 6111 aluminum alloy as the subject of investigation. By designing tensile specimens with the same characteristic dimensions but varying fillet radii, the effects of fillet radius on the tensile properties and stress concentration effects of the aluminum alloy were studied through tensile testing and digital image correlation techniques. The results demonstrate that with an increase in fillet radius, the failure strength and stress distribution of the aluminum alloy specimens have both undergone alterations. This phenomenon can be attributed to the reduction of stress concentration at the fillet due to the larger fillet radius. Further verification through digital image correlation reaffirms that samples with a fillet radius of 10mm exhibit notable stress concentration effects at the fillet, while specimens with a fillet radius increased to 40mm display uniform plastic deformation across the parallel section.
Technical Paper

Simulation of Self-Piercing Riveting Process in Aluminum Alloy 5754 Using Smoothed Particle Galerkin Method

2024-04-09
2024-01-2069
Self-piercing riveting (SPR) are one of most important joining approaches in lightweight vehicle design for Body-in-white (BIW) manufacturing. Numerical simulation of the riveting process could significantly boost design efficiency by reducing trial-and-error experiments. The traditional Finite Element Method (FEM) with element erosion is hard to capture the large plastic deformation and complex failure behaviors in the SPR process. The smoothed Particle Galerkin Method (SPG) is a genuine meshless method based on Galerkin's weak form, which uses a novel bond-based failure mechanism to keep the conservation of mass and momentum during the material failure process. This study utilizes a combined FEM and SPG approach to join Aluminum sheet 5754 using a full three-dimensional (3D) model in LS-DYNA/explicit.
Technical Paper

A Study on the Correlation between Heat-Treatment Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Additive Manufactured Al-Si-Mg Alloy with Bulk and Lattice Structure for Weight Reduction of Vehicle Parts and Application of Shock Absorbing Regions

2024-04-09
2024-01-2574
This study delves into the microstructural and mechanical characteristics of AlSi10Mg alloy produced through the Laser Powder Bed Fusion (L-PBF) method. The investigation identified optimal process parameters for AlSi10Mg alloy based on Volume Energy Density (VED). Manufacturing conditions in the L-PBF process involve factors like laser power, scan speed, hatching distance, and layer thickness. Generally, high laser power may lead to spattering, while low laser power can result in lack-of-fusion areas. Similarly, high scan speeds may cause lack-of-fusion, and low scan speeds can induce spattering. Ensuring the quality of specimens and parts necessitates optimizing these process parameters. To address the low elongation properties in the as-built condition, heat treatment was employed. The initial microstructure of AlSi10Mg alloy in its as-built state comprises a cell structure with α-Al cell walls and eutectic Si.
Technical Paper

Additive Manufacturing in Powertrain Development – From Prototyping to Dedicated Production Design

2024-04-09
2024-01-2578
Upcoming, increasingly stringent greenhouse gas (GHG) as well as emission limits demand for powertrain electrification throughout all vehicle applications. Increasing complexity of electrified powertrain architectures require an overall system approach combining modular component technology with integration and industrialization requirements when heading for further significant efficiency optimization. At the same time focus on reduced development time, product cost and minimized additional investment demand reuse of current production, machining, and assembly facilities as far as possible. Up to date additive manufacturing (AM) is an established prototype component, as well as tooling technology in the powertrain development process, accelerating procurement time and cost, as well as allowing to validate a significantly increased number of variants. The production applications of optimized, dedicated AM-based component design however are still limited.
Technical Paper

The Influence of Fundamental Processing Parameters of Ultrasonic Shot Peening on Surface Characteristics of 7B50-T7751 Alloy

2024-04-09
2024-01-2681
Aluminum alloy has become an indispensable part of the automotive industry because of its excellent mechanical properties such as lightweight, high strength, high reliability, maintainability, and low cost. Aluminum alloy is used in automobiles, such as engine blocks, cylinder heads, intake manifolds, brake components, and fuel tanks. Fatigue and fracture are the main reasons for its engineering failure. Surface strengthening techniques, such as ultrasonic shot peening (USP), are often used to improve the fatigue resistance of aluminum alloys. This article expounds on the working principle of USP and elucidates the influence of USP process parameters on the surface characteristics of aluminum alloy. Experimental results observed the effects of USP parameters on surface properties such as surface roughness, microhardness, and surface morphology.
Technical Paper

Effect of Secondary Dendrite Arm Spacing on Strength Behaviour of Automotive Alloy Wheel

2024-04-09
2024-01-2736
Strength, creep, and fatigue of the chassis components are greatly influenced by the material used and its manufacturing process. Alloy wheel is one of the critical chassis components manufactured using the casting process. Secondary Dendrite Arm Spacing (SDAS) is one of the important microstructural parameters generated during the solidification stage of the casting process. SDAS has a significant role in altering the mechanical properties and the behavior of the component. Variation in solidification time and alloy composition will have a major impact in SDAS. The combined effect of SDAS with microstructural variations and the strength behavior has not been studied in earlier literature for an alloy wheel. The scope of this study is to perform casting simulation for an alloy wheel, predict the SDAS and capture the variation of mechanical properties (yield strength, ultimate tensile strength & elongation).
Journal Article

Water Droplet Collison and Erosion on High-Speed Spinning Wheels

2024-04-04
Abstract The water droplet erosion (WDE) on high-speed rotating wheels appears in several engineering fields such as wind turbines, stationary steam turbines, fuel cell turbines, and turbochargers. The main reasons for this phenomenon are the high relative velocity difference between the colliding particles and the rotor, as well as the presence of inadequate material structure and surface parameters. One of the latest challenges in this area is the compressor wheels used in turbochargers, which has a speed up to 300,000 rpm and have typically been made of aluminum alloy for decades, to achieve the lowest possible rotor inertia. However, while in the past this component was only encountered with filtered air, nowadays, due to developments in compliance with tightening emission standards, various fluids also collide with the spinning blades, which can cause mechanical damage.
Standard

New Steel Designation System for Wrought or Rolled Steel

2024-03-18
CURRENT
J402_202403
This SAE Standard describes a new alphanumeric designation system for wrought steel used to designate wrought ferrous materials, identify chemical composition, and any other requirements listed in SAE Standards and Recommended Practices. The previous SAE steel designation coding system consisted of four or five numbers used to designate standard carbon and alloy steels specified to chemical composition ranges. Using SAE 1035 as an example, the 35 represents the nominal weight % carbon content for the grade. Using SAE 52100 as an example, the 100 represents the nominal weight % carbon content. The first two numbers of this four or five number series are used to designate the steel grade carbon or alloy system with variations in elements other than carbon. These are described in Table 1. In addition to the standard four or five number steel designation above, a letter was sometimes added to the grade code to denote a non-standard specific element being added to the standard grade.
Technical Paper

Synergistic Impact of Mechanical Properties on Friction Stir Welding Zone Formation in Magnesium Alloy: An Optimized Approach

2024-03-14
2024-01-5034
A growing number of industries are utilizing friction stir welding (FSW), which has shown promise for joining different materials. In this study, the impacts of rotation speed and tool pin shape are examined, as well as the FSW zone generation in the magnesium alloy AZ31. The physical attributes of rotation speed, feed rate, pin profile shape, and the mechanical properties of the AZ31 magnesium alloy hardness, impact energy, and tensile strength are examined in this research to determine the properties of FSW. Under optimal conditions, taper-threaded tool pins, 40 mm/min welding speed, and 1000 rpm rotation speed achieved maximal micro-hardness. The FSW tool creates heat at 1000 rpm, improving the softened metal’s mechanical properties. Thus, the metal content in the stir zone was uniform. Some process variables impacted the response surface methodology (RSM) parametric design and subsequent optimization procedure.
Standard

Motor Vehicle Brake Fluid Based Upon Glycols, Glycol Ethers, and the Corresponding Borates

2024-03-12
CURRENT
J1704_202403
This SAE Standard covers motor vehicle brake fluids of the nonpetroleum type, based upon glycols, glycol ethers, and borates of glycol ethers, and appropriate inhibitors for use in the braking system of any motor vehicle, such as a passenger car, truck, bus, or trailer. These fluids are not intended for use under arctic conditions. These fluids are designed for use in braking systems fitted with rubber cups and seals made from styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR) or a terpolymer of ethylene, propylene, and a diene (EPDM).
Standard

Motor Vehicle Brake Fluid

2024-03-12
CURRENT
J1703_202403
This SAE Standard covers motor vehicle brake fluids of the nonpetroleum type, based upon glycols, glycol ethers, and appropriate inhibitors, for use in the braking system of any motor vehicle such as a passenger car, truck, bus, or trailer. These fluids are not intended for use under arctic conditions. These fluids are designed for use in braking systems fitted with rubber cups and seals made from styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR), or a terpolymer of ethylene, propylene, and a diene (EPDM).
Standard

Standard Sheet Steel Thickness and Tolerances

2024-03-04
CURRENT
J1058_202403
This SAE Recommended Practice provides an orderly series for designating the thickness of unocated and coated hot-rolled and cold-rolled sheet and strip. This document also provides methods for specifying thickness tolerances.
Standard

Estimated Mechanical Properties and Machinability of Steel Bars

2024-03-04
CURRENT
J1397_202403
This SAE Information Report is intended to provide a guide to mechanical and machinability characteristics of some SAE steel grades. The ratings and properties shown are provided as general information and not as requirements for specifications unless each instance is approved by the source of supply. The data are based on resources which may no longer be totally accurate. However, this report is retained as a service in lieu of current data.
Technical Paper

An Investigation into the Heat Deformation of a Powder-Metallurgical Iron- Aluminium-Chromium Alloy

2024-02-23
2023-01-5128
Powder metallurgy of 3065IS temperature and strain rate were only two of the variables used to investigate the higher permeability of an iron alloy. A strain rate vs. stress plot revealed a critical value. This demonstrated that the functioning of the alloy was comparable to that of other materials in its class. We used a transmission electron microscope to examine the microstructure of routinely twisted materials to determine particle characteristics and precipitate distribution. This allowed us to gain a better understanding of the internal workings of materials. Using constitutive equations, we investigated the link between temperature and stress. This study's findings were incorporated into equations describing the material's high thermal behaviour, and a modified version of the cosec equation was used to analyse this reliance. Effective stress was defined as the distinction between actual stress and a present limit.
Technical Paper

A Direct Current Magnetron Sputtering Study of the Shape Memory Properties of Aluminum/Silicon Alloy Thin Films

2024-02-23
2023-01-5134
Using dc magnetron sputtering, Al/Si films were made on surfaces made of fused quartz and silicon. It was carefully controlled that the films contained no more than 7 at.% silicon under ideal deposition conditions. This was done by changing the target's structure and adding silicon lines to it. This had to be done to get a good reading on how much silicon was in the plates. After being heated to 800°C and then cooled in very cold water, the thermo-elastic face-centered cubic structure changed into the flat crush test martensite. In Al/Si films with a Si content of 25.6%, this change took place. It looks like the shift in the opposite way was also thermoelastic. The several thermoelastic transitions that happened were caused by changes in temperature. Some Al-36 at.% Si coatings that were scraped off of a quartz substrate showed shape memory qualities when heated after being deformed. The coverings on these things were warped.
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